%'<^'!®.'^<!^'^Q' 



^LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. li 



jf^^^P Iw^ifa I 



^UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.^ 



CONCORDANCE 



TO 



SHAKESPEARE'S POE 

j 



TO EVEEY WOED THEEEIN CONTAINED 

BY 
MES HORACE HOWARD FURNESS 



' to youk audit comes 

Their distkact parcels in combined sums.' 



X 

V '-'Mill- 



C./3 



PHILADELPHIA 
J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. 

1874 



Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1874, by 

H. H. FURNESS, 
In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. 



Westcott & Thomson, Lippincott's Press, 

Slereotypers and Electrotypers, Philada. Philada. 



PREFACE 



As it is impossible to limit the purposes for which the language of 
Shakespeare may be studied, or to say that the time will not come, if it 
has not already, when his use of every part of speech, down to the hum- 
blest conjunction, will be criticised Avith as much nicety as has been 
bestowed upon Greek and Latin authors, it seems to me that, in the selec- 
tion of words to be recorded, no discretionary powers should be granted to 
the ' harmless drudge ' compiling a Concordance. Within a year or two a 
German scholar has published a pamphlet of some fifty pages on Shake- 
speare's use of the auxiliary verb to do, and Abbott's Grammar shows with 
what success the study of Shakespeare's language in its minutest particu- 
lars may be pursued. I have therefore cited in the following pages every 
word in his Poems. 

I would not have it thought that any imperfection is hereby imputed to 
Mrs Clarke's invaluable Concordance of the Dramas. The bulk of that 
work was a sufficient bar to the plan I have been enabled to follow in the 
lesser task which was before me. 

Having adopted the rule of recording every word, I thought it a need- 
less expenditure of space to insert in every instance the entire line in 
which a word occurs. I have given the clause in which the word stands 
and the number of the line, and then, that nothing may be wanting to the 
convenience of the student, the Poems themselves are reprinted at the end. 
If in any case the citations appear meagre, the original is instantly ac- 
cessible. 

Compound words, such as seal-manual, are entered under each word ; but 
not compounds without a hyphen, such as eyelid; nor words not separated 
by a hyphen from their prefixes. 

Such words as 'stonished, 'onongst, etc. are given under their unabbreviated 
forms also. 

Where the same word has two or more meanings, such as lie, light, ivish, 
etc., an Italic catchword indicates the change from one sense to another. 
I have not thus subdivided words when there were less than half a dozen 
instances of the word ; nor have I thought it necessary to indicate purely 



iv PREFACE 

grammatical distinctions. Such an attempt seems not properly to belong 
to a mere Verbal Index, and would, moreover, to be thorougli, demand a 
familiarity with Shakespeare's use of language to which I can lay no claim. 

I have not placed under a separate catchvi'ord the third person singular 
of verbs, lest I should be introducing subdivisions that Avould not com- 
pensate for the confusion that might arise, especially where there is a 
difference of spelling ; and for the same reason I have not separated the 
singulars and plurals. 

Where and is used as a copula of two nouns, both nouns are given. 

I have followed the text of the Cambridge Edition, with the exception of 
some trifling deviations in punctuation. 

As the pages are stereotyped, corrections can be made at any time of mis- 
prints, against which it seems that no human vigilance can guard, and I 
shall be grateful to the kindness that will notify me of them. 

My special thanks are gladly given to Mr W. A. Wheeler, of The Boston 
Public Library, for the handsome way in which he placed at my disposal 
his MS. Concordance of these Poems. As my Avork was well advanced 
when his offer came, I have not availed myself of his kindness, yet it is 
none the less felt. The motto on the title-page is his witty suggestion. 

H. K. F. 



CONCORDANCE 



TO 



SHAKESPEARE'S POEMS 



A — like a bold-faced suitor VA 6 

more lovely than a man " 9 

A thousand honey secrets " 16 

A summer's day will seem " 23 

to do a goddess good " 28 

in a dull disdain " 33 

on a ragged bough " 37 

murders with a kiss " 54 

as on a prey " 63 

how a bird lies tangled in a net " 67 

Eain added to a river " 71 

For to a pretty ear " 74 

with a more delight " 78 

Like a dive-dapper peering through 

a wave " 86 

but a kiss I beg " 96 

in a red-rose chain " 110 

like a fairy, trip " _,.. 146 

Like a nymph, with long " 147 

a spirit all compact of fire " 149 

with a lazy spright " 181 

and with a heavy, dark " 182 

made a shadow for thee " 191 

Art thou a woman's son " 201 

borne so hard a mind " 203 

Thing like a man " 214 

of a man's complexion " 215 

Doth provoke a pause " 218 

infold him like a band " 225 

I'll be a park " 231 

I am such a park " 239 

though a thousand bark " 240 

appears a pretty dimple " 242 

in a tomb so simple " 244 

needs a second striking " 250 

To love a cheek that smiles " 252 

from forth a copse " 259 

A breeding jennet " — 260 

tied unto a tree " . 263 

As from a furnace " 274 

Look, when a painter " -... 289 

a well-proportion'd steed " 290 

excel a common one " 293 

Look, what a horse should have " — . 299 
Save a proud rider on so proud a 

back " 300 

Stirring of a feather " _.„ 302 

To bid the wind a base ''' 303 



L — like a melancholy malcontent V A 313 

like a falling plume " 314 

Even as a dying coal " 338 

O, what a sight it was " 343 

like a lowly lover " 350 

O, what a war of looks " 355 

A lily prison'd in a gaol of snow " 362 

So white a friend engirts so white 

a foe " 364 

And I a man " 369 

Affection is a coal " 387 

How like a jade he stood " 391 

a leathern rein " 392 

a whiter hue than white " 398 

Unless it be a boar " 410 

it is a life in death " 413 

and all but with a breath " 414 

' Who wears a garment " 415 

where a heart is hard " 426 

' hast thou a tongue " 427 

Like a red morn " 453 

deadly bullet of a gun " 461 

A smile recures the wounding of a 

frown " 465 

' A thousand kisses buys " 517 

Such a trouble " 522 

you shall have a kiss " 535 

his neck, a sweet embrace " 539 

a desperate courage " 556 

Like a wild bird " 560 

like a pale-faced coward " 569 

not repel a lover " 573 

Whereat a sudden pale " 589 

deserved a greater fee " 609 

A churlish swine to gore " 616 

Like to a mortal butcher " 618 

he hath a battle set " 619 

And in a peaceful hour " 652 

with a thousand doubles " 682 

Are like a labyrinth " 684 

among a flock of sheep " 685 

with a herd of deer " 689 

far off upon a hill " 697 

and hear a little more " 70^ 

rob thee of a kiss " «... 723 

Steal a kiss, and die forsworn ^ " 726 

but a swallowing grave " 757 

So fair a hope is slaia " 762 



k — A mischief worse V A 764 

A false sound enter there " 780 

like a ghitton dies " 803 

how a bright star " 815 

a late-embarked friend " 81S 

dropp'd a precious jewel " 824 

begins a wailing note " 835 

a woeful ditty " 836 

There lives a son " 863 

hasteth to a myrtle grove " 865 

Like a milch doe " 875 

hounds are at a bay " 877 

in a trembling ecstasy " 895 

'tis a causeless fantasy " 897 

A second fear through all " 903 

A thousand spleens bear her a thou- 
sand ways " 907 

of a drunken brain " 910 

in a brake she finds a hound " 913 

bid thee crop a weed, thou pluck'st 

a flower " 946 

may a heavy groan " 950 

like a stormy day " 965 

A nurse's song ne'er pleased " 974 

felt a kind of fear " 998 

' how much a fool was I " 1015 

a weak and silly mind " 1016 

a merry horn " 1025 

Who, like a king " 1043 

gives a deadly groan " 1044 

looketh for a grave " 1106 

But by a kiss " 1114 

in his ears a heavy tale " 1125 

A thousand times " 1130 

in a breathing while " 1142 

the old become a child " 1152 

melted like a vapour " 1166 

A purple flower sprung up " 1168 

a more sweet-smelling sire " 1178 

to such a peerless dame R L 21 

enjoy'd but of a few " 22 

from a world of harms " 28 

proud issue of a king " 37 

of so rich a thing " 39 

in -so false a foe " 77 

to find a stranger just " 159 

on a flint he softly smiteth " 176 

Whereat a waxen torch " 178 

to so pure a shrine " 194 

A martial man to be " 200 

a true respect should have " 201 

A dream, a breath, a froth of fleet- 
ing " 212 

a minute's mirth to wail a week " 213 

to get a toy " 214 

and in a desperate rage " 219 

with so black a deed " 226 

Who fears a sentence " 244 

Shall by a painted cloth " 245 

Which in a moment " 250 

like a virtuous deed " 252 

with so sweet a cheer " 264 

That now he vows a league " 287 

Unto a view so false " 292 

But with a pure appeal " 293 

Who witli a lingering stay " 328 

To add a more rejoicing " 332 

Which with a yielding latch " 339 

lEushing from forth a cloud " 373 



A— with a greater light R L 375 

of a lawful kiss " 387 

Where like a virtuous monument " 391 

A pair of maiden worlds " 408 

like a foul usurper " 412 

Unto a greater uproar " 427 

such a dignity " 437 

in a thousand fears " 456 

Like to a new-kill'd bird " 457 

First, like a trumpet " 470 

To sound a parley " 471 

guarded with a sting " 493 

Which, like a falcon " 506 

is as a thought unacted " 527 

A little harm done to a great good " 528 

In a pure compound " 531 

Worse than a slavish wipe " 537 

Here with a cockatrice' dead-kill- 
ing eye " 540 

and makes a pause " 541 

Like a white hind " 543 

Pleads, in a wilderness " 544 

But when a black-faced cloud " 547 

A swallowing gulf " 557 

a poor unseasonable doe " 581 

Myself a weakling " 584 

like a troubled ocean " 589 

than a stone thou art " 593 

a god, a king " 601 

once thou art a king " 606 

but a bawd ' " 623 

From a pure heart " 625 

how vile a spectacle " 631 

pay a daily debt " 649 

' a sea, a sovereign king " 652 

Thy sea within a puddle " 657 

so pure a bed " 684 

lost a dearer thing " 687 

force a further strife " 689 

Till, like a jade " 707 

Like to a bankrupt " 711 

A captive victor " 730 

of a guilty mind " 735 

He like a thievish dog " 736 

She like a wearied lamb " 737 

a heavy convertite " 743 

remains a hopeless cast-away " 744 

with a cunning brow " 749 

so pure a mind ' " 761 

he made a theme " 822 

a drone-like bee " 836 

a wandering wasp " 839 

in such a devil " 847 

to a public fast " 891 

to a ragged name " 892 

A thousand crosses " 912 

Sin ne'er gives a fee " 913 

of a lawful bed " 938 

the child a man, the man a child " 954 

a thousand thousand friends " 963 

a hideous shapeless devil " 973 

to live a loathed slave " 984 

a beggar's orts to crave " 985 

deathsraan to so base a slave " 1001 

coming from a king " 1002 

force not argument a straw " 1021 

to end a hapless life " 1045 

seek a knife " 1047 

I was a loyal wife " 1048 



A— A badge of fame It L 1054 

A dying life " 1055 

amountain spring that feeds a dale " 1077 

testy as a child " 1094 

in a sea of care " 1100 

like a gentle flood " 1118 

A woeful hostess " 1125 

will strain a tear " 1131 

And whiles against a thorn " 1135 

Will fix a sharp knife " 1138 

with a winding maze " 1151 

tries a merciless conclusion " 11(50 

and sorts a sad look " 1221 

like a melting eye " 1227 

Who in a salt-waved ocean " 1231 

A pretty while " 1233 

semblance of a devil " 1246 

like a goodly champaign plain " 1247 

in a rough-grown grove " 1249 

abuse a body dead " 1267 

Till after a deep groan " 1276 

may be call'd a hell " 1287 

A letter to my lord " 1293 

a press of people at a door " 1301 

a part of woe " 1327 

'Tis but a part " 1328 

with a steadfast eye " 1339 

have a true respect " 1347 

a little while doth stay " 1364 

where hangs a piece " 1366 

A thousand lamentable objects " 1373 

a dry drop seem'd a weeping tear " 1375 

About him were a press " 1408 

A hand, a foot, a face, a leg, a head " 1427 

a kind of heavy fear " 1435 

To find a face " 1444 

in a body dead " 1456 

and not a tongue " 1463 

without a sound " 1464 

To plague a private sin " 1484 

like a heavy-hanging bell " 1493 

she sees a wretched image " 1501 

A brow unbent " 1509 

But, like a constant " 1513 

He entertain'd a show " 1514 

Into so bright a day " 1518 

a form lodged not a mind " 1530 

lurk in such a look " 1535 

a face should bear a wicked " 1540 

tear he falls a Trojan bleeds " 1551 

old acquaintance in a trance " 1595 

A stranger came " 1620 

A creeping creature with a flaming " 1627 

with so strong a fear " 1647 

his sorrows make a saw " 1672 

'tis a meritorious fair design " 1692 

While with a joyless smile " 1711 

Here with a sigh " 1716 

A harmful knife " 1724 

Who, like a late sack'd island " 1740 

a watery rigol goes " 1745 

Shows me a bare-boned death " 1761 

starts Collatine as from a dream " 1772 

to die with her a space " 1776 

Have served a dumb arrest " 1780 

self, supposed a fool " 1819 

to give thyself a blow. " 1823 

Making a famine Snn 1 7 

Will be a tatter'd weed "24 



A — So great a sum of sums 
A liquid prisoner 
unless thou get a son 
to wet a widow's eye. 
like a makeless wife 
so fair a house fall 
You had a father 
but a little moment 
do not you a mightier way 
it is but as a tomb 
be term'd a poet's rage 
thee to a summer's day 
all too short a date 
A woman's face 
A woman's gentle heart 
A man in hue 

And for a woman wert thou 
Stirr'd by a painted beauty 
Making a couplement 
For at a frown 
After a thousand victories 
a journey in my head 
Intend a zealous 
Which, like a jewel hung 
many a thing I sought 
of many a vanished sight 
How many a holy 
A dearer birth than this 
Full many a glorious morning 
such a beauteous day 
such a salve can speak 
a lawful plea commence 
lives a separable spite 
As a decrepit father 
And by a part of all 
O absence, what a toiinent 
it is a greater grief 
to break a twofold truth 
A loss in love 
are at a mortal war 
A closet never pierced 
A quest of thoughts 
and heart a league is took 
is famish'd for a look 
doth share a part 
thievish for a prize 
he answers with a groan 
have fujl as deep a dye 
with a perpetual dullness 
But, like a sad slave 
So true a fool 
burthen of a former child 
with a backward look 
For such a time 
This thought is as a death 
shall beauty hold a plea 
no stronger than a flower 
desert a beggar born 
on a living brow 
To live a second life 
And him as for a map 
A crow that flies 
a pure unstained prime 
conquest of a wretch's knife 
As twixt a miser and his wealth 
clean starved for a look 
invention in a noted weed 
To take a new acquaintance 
grace a double majesty 



Son 



4 


8 


5 


10 


7 


14 


9 


1 


9 


4 


13 


9 


13 


14 


15 


2 


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3 


17 


11 


IS 


1 


18 


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2 


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5 


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25 


10 


27 


3 


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• 11 


30 


3 


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5 


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1 


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7 


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10 


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63 


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3 


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2 


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70 


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74 


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10 


76 


6 


77 


12 


78 


8 



X. — travail of a worthier pen Son 
knowing a better spirit doth use " 

I am a worthless boat " 

but a common grave " 

a limit past my praise " 

tender of a poet's debt " 

How far a modem quill " 

and bring a tomb " 

And such a counterpart " 
beauteous blessings add a curse " 

Above a mortal pitch " 

as a dream doth ilatter " 

In sleep a king " 

I can set down a story " 

will be a gainer too " 

To set a form " 

of a conquer'd woe " 
a windy night a rainy morrow " 

out a purposed overthrow " 

a joy above the rest " 

I see a better state " 

0, what a happy title " 

Like a deceived husband " 

Which, like a canker " 

but in a kind of praise " 

O, what a mansion " 

finger of a throned qneen " 

If like a lamb " 

How like a winter " 

'tis with so dull a cheer " 

Hath put a spirit " 

A third nor red nor white " 
A vengeful canker eat him np " 

be a satire to decay " 

outlive a gilded tomb " 

a scope to show her pride " 

and there appears a face " 

like a dial-hand " 

in a wondrous excellence " 

Even such a beauty " 

forfeit to a confined doom " 

a motley to the view " 

A god in love " 

my name receives a brand " 

like a willing patient " 

bad a perfect best " 

Love is a babe " 

found a kind of meetness " 

medicine a healthful state " 

you've pass'd a hell of time " 

And I, a tyrant " 

now becomes a fee " 

dressings of a former sight " 
Hence, thou subom'd informer! a 

true soul " 

with a bastard shame " 

with a false esteem " 

in a waste of shame " 

as a swallow'd bait " 
A bliss in proof, and proved, a very 

woe " 
Before a joy proposed, behind, a 

dream '' 

a far more pleasing sound " 

never saw a goddess go " 

A thousand groans " 

A torment thrice threefold " 

And sue a friend " 

Among a number " 



79 


6 


80 


2 


80 


11 


81 


7 


82 


6 


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S7 


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8 



A — a something sweet to thee J 

think that a several plot 
upon 80 foul a face 
a thousand errors note 
the likeness of a man 
as a careful housewife 
is a man right fair 
a woman colour'd ill 
my saint to be a devil 
who, like a fiend 
having so short a lease 
My love is as a fever 
so foul a lie 
A maid of Dian's this 
In a cold valley-fountain 
A dateless lively heat 
And grew a seething bath 
maladies a sovereign cure 
a sad distemper'd guest 
by a virgin hand disarm'd 
quench in a cool well 
a bath and healthful remedy 
From oft' a hill whose concave J 
A plaintful story from a sistering 
espied a fickle maid 
a platted hive of straw 
The carcass of a beauty 
a careless hand of pride 
A thousand favours from a raaund 
she in a river threw 
had she many a one 
Crack'd many a ring 
A reverend roan that grazed 
Sometime a blusterer 
injury of many a blasting 
have been a spreading flower 
A youthful suit 
Love lack'd a dwelling 
was he such a storm 
falseness in a pride of truth 
And controversy hence a question 
The one a palate hath 
from many a several fair 
was sent me from a nnn 
to charm a sacred nun 
a river running from a fount 
what a hell of witchcraft 
a plenitude of subtle matter 
That not a heart which 
the garment of a Grace 
"Which, like a cherubin 
do again for such a sake 
pervert a reconciled maid 
is a soothing tongue J 

angel is a man right fair 
a woman colour'd ill 
my saint to be a devil 
A woman I forswore 
Thou being a goddess 
thou a heavenly love 
and breath a vapour ia 
to win a paradise 
sitting by a brook 
with many a lovely look 
A longing tarriance 
osier growing by a brook 
A brook where Adon used 
' why was not I a flood 
ISiild as a dove 



13S 12 

137 9 

137 12 

141 2 

141 11 

143 1 

144 3 
144 4 

144 7 

145 11 

146 5 

147 1 

152 14 

153 2 
153 4 
153 6 
153 7 
153 8 

153 12 

154 8 
154 9 
154 11 

C 1 

' 2 

' 5 

' 8 

' 11 

' 30 

' 36 

' 38 

' 43 

' 45 

' 57 

' 58 

' 72 

' 75 

' 79 

' 82 

' 101 

' 105 

' 110 

' 167 

' 206 

' 232 

' 260 

' 283 

' 288 

' 302 

' 309 

' 316 

' 319 

' 322 

' 329 

P 1 11 

2 3 

' 2 4 

2 7 

3 5 
' 3 6 

3 7 

3 9 
' 3 14 

4 1 
4 3 
6 4 
6 5 
6 6 

6 14 

7 2 



ACCIDENT 



A — A lily pale, with damask P P 1 5 

Was this a lover or a lecher " 7 17 

a youngster proud and wild "94 

upon a steep-up hill "95 

' did I see a fair sweet youth "99 

deep-wounded with a boar " 9 10 

a spectacle of ruth " 9 11 

a green plum that hangs upon a tree " 10 5 

under a myrtle shade " 11 2 

Beauty is but a vain " 13 1 

A shining gloss " 13 2 

A flower that dies " 13 3 

A brittle glass that's broken " 13 4 

A doubtful good, a gloss, a glass, a 

flower " 13 5 

dalF'd me to a cabin " 14 3 

' Wander,' a word for shadows " 14 11 

each minute seems a moon " 15 15 

It was a lording's daughter " 16 1 

alas, it was a spite " 16 7 

Which by a gift of learning " 16 14 

On a day, alack the day " 17 1 

Spied a blossom passing fair " 17 3 

so apt to pluck a sweet " 17 14 

There a nay is placed " 18 12 

Like a thousand vanquish'd men " IS 36 

For a sweet content " 18 51 

A cripple soon can find a halt " 19 10 

A woman's nay doth stand " 19 42 

make thee a bed of roses " 20 9 

With a thousand fragrant " 20 10 

A cap of flowers and a kirtle " 20 11 

A belt of straw and ivy buds " 20 13 

it fell upon a day " 21 1 

Sitting in a pleasant shade " 21 3 

Which a grove of myrtles made " 21 4 

her breast up-till a thorn " 21 10 

but he were a king " 21 42 

He with thee doth bear a part " 21 56 

In a mutual flame P T 24 

But in them it were a wonder " 32 

How true a twain " 45 

For these dead birds sigh a prayer " 67 

Abate — Air and water do .... V A 654 

Abettor— Thou foul RL 886 

Abhor — why dost me V A 138 

humanity abhor the deed RL 195 

to whom I pray abhor this fact " 349 

what others do abhor Hon 150 11 

shouldst not abhor my state " 150 12 

Age, I do abhor thee P P 12 9 
Abide — 

With patience must my will R L 486 

huge fires abide " 647 

still doth red abide " ..... 1749 

from far where I abide Son 11 5 

wherever I abide " 45 2 

in his fair parts she did abide L C 83 

A-billing' — doves that sit VA 366 

Able — that spirit affords Son 85 7 

Abomination — see his own .... R L 704 

of incest, that abomination " 921 

sutfer these abominations " 1832 

About — goeth to take him V A 319 

some twine about her thigh " 873 

about he walks R L 367 

a foul usurper went about " 412 

Knit poisonous clouds about his 

golden head " 777 



About — . . . him were a press R L 1403 

tlirows her eyes about the paint- 
ing round " 1409 

about her tear-distained eye " 1586 

About the mourning " 1744 

governs me to go about Son 113 2 

Above — Sweet compare VA 8 

Above a mortal pitch Son 86 6 

a joy above the rest " 91 6 

but, by all above " 110 6 

above that idle rank " 122 3 

above them hover'd L C 319 

Abridgement— This brief ... RL 1198 

Abroad — which they find L C I.'i7 

offences that abroad you see " 1S3 

Absence — O ...., what a torment Son 39 9 

the bitterness of absence " 57 7 

absence of your liberty " 58 6 

hath my absence been " 97 1 

Though absence seem'd " 109 2 

makes her absence valiant L C 245 

Absent — from thy heart Son 41 2 

These present-absent with swift 

motion slide " 45 4 

Be absent from thy walks " 89 9 

have I been absent " 98 1 

Absolute — perfection is so ... . R L 853 

Absolution— is clear'd with .... " 354 

Abstaining — 
hopes persuade him to ... . " 130 

Abundance — where .... lies Soti 1 7 

whose strength's abundance " 23 4 

That I in thy abundance " 37 11 

And in abundance addeth " 135 10 

Abundant — Yet this .... issue " 97 9 

Abuse — 

themselves are growth's .... VA 15 

bawd to lust's abuse " 792 

remorse in poor abuses R L 269 

this false night's abuses " 1075 

With men's abuses " 1259 

her own gross abuse " 1315 

stain'd with this abuse " 1655 

At my abuses reckon up Son 121 10 

through my unkind abuse " 134 12 

Abuse — do presently abuse it R L 864 

abuse a body dead " 1267 

why dost thou abuse Son 4 5 

even so doth she abuse me " 42 7 

Abused — 

some shape in Siuon's was .... R L 1529 

in thee it is abused Son 82 14 

Abusing — wail the .... of his time R L 994 

Abysm — In so profound .... Son 112 9 

Accent — so her .... breaks R L 566 

many accents and delays " 1719 

In other accents do this praise Son 69 7 

Acceptable — 

What .... audit can'st thou " 4 12 

Acceptance — no fair .... shine " 135 8 

Their kind acceptance L C 207 

Accessary — An .... by thine inclina- 
tion R L 922 

Toaccessaryyieldings but still pure " 1658 

That I an accessary Son 35 13 

Accident — 

Time, whose million'd .... " 115 5 

builded far from accident " 124 5 

The accident which brought me L C 247 



ACCIDENTAL 



ADVANTAGE 



Accidental— things of trial R L 326 

Accomplished— in himself L C 116 

Accomplishiueiit— Who this .... R L 716 

Accorded — this double voice L C 3 

Account — 

The sad .... of forebemoaned Son 30 11 

the account of hours to crave " 58 3 

no truth of such account " 62 6 

Though in thy store's account " 136 10 

Accounted— shall be evil R L 1245 

Across — and wretched arms ... . " 1662 

Accumulate — 

on just proof surmise .... Son 117 10 

Accurst — the more am I . . . . VA 1120 

Accuse — ....me thus Son 111 1 

breach do I accuse thee " 152 5 

Accusing— Without you " 58 8 

Ache— whose swelling dugs do ... . VA 875 

make the wound ache more R L 1116 

Achieve — advantage should .... Son 67 3 

Achilles— That for ... . image R L 1424 

Acknowledge — evermore .... thee Son 36 9 

Acquaintance — old .... in a trance R L 1595 

To take a new acquaintance Son 77 12 

I will acquaintance strangle " 89 8 

of our old acquaintance tell " 89 12 

Acquainted — but not .... "20 3 

being best acquainted " 88 5 

Acquit — . . . . my forced offence J2 L 1071 

acquit me from this chance '' 1706 

Act — had his .... made plain V A 359 

0, impious act including all foul R. L 199 

assist me in the act " 350 

The loathsome act of lust " 1636 

this act will be " 1637 

with the foul act dispense " 1704 

For his foul act " 1824 

In act thy bed-vow broke Son 152 8 

Act—1 did but act VA 1006 

on his did act the seizure P P 11 10 
Action — 

till might become them better iJi 1323 

such sober action with his hand " 1403 

they such odd action yield " 1433 

Wliose action is no stronger Son 65 4 
Is lust in action; and till action, lust " 129 2 

Active— To see his child " 37 2 

Actor — From vassal actors R L 608 

As an imperfect actor Son 23 1 

Acture — with .... they may be L C ..... 185 

Add — Now she adds honours V A 994 

To add a more rejoicing R L 332 

her oratory adds more grace " 564 

Add to his flow " 651 

add the rank smell Son 69 12 

blessings add a curse " 84 13 

add something more " 85 10 

' Will ' add to thy ' Will ' " 135 11 

Added — Rain to a river VA 71 

Have added feathers Son 78 7 

my added praise beside '' 103 4 

minutes added to the hours PP 15 14 

Adder — one that spies an .... V A 878 

The adder hisses R L 871 

that my adder's sense Son 112 10 

Addeth— ... to his store " 135 10 

Addict— he to vice PP 21 43 



Adding— By. 

pose 



. one thing to my pur- 



Son 20 12 



Addition— And by Son 20 11 

making addition thus " 135 4 

came for additions L C 118 

Addressed — . ... to answer R L 1606 

Adieu — and, ere he says, .. .. VA 537 

bid your servant once adieu Son 57 8 

Adjunct — Though death be ... . R L 133 

hath his adjunct pleasure Son 91 5 

To keep an adjunct " 122 13 

Admiration — than .... he admired R L 418 

Admire — and therefore we ... , Son 123 5 

I thy parts admire P P 5 10 

Admired— To be .... of lewd " 392 

than admiration he admired " 418 

stj'le admired everywhere Son 84 12 

Admiring — have given .... praise " 59 14 

Admit — His ear her prayers admits R L 558 

admit impediments Son 116 2 

Admitted— is .... there " 136 3 

Ado— 
With much .... the cold fault VA 694 

Adon — ' Nay, then,' quoth ... . " 769 

' behold two Adons dead " 1070 

Adon used to cool his spleen P P 6 6 

For Adon's sake "94 

Adonis — Eose-cheek'd ... hied him F^l 3 

in her arms Adonis lies " 63 

Wishing Adonis had " 179 

and now Adonis " 181 

At this Adonis smiles " 241 

Adonis' trampling courser " 261 

and left Adonis there ' " 322 

down Adonis sits " 325 

Because Adonis' heart " 378 

it is Adonis' voice '' 978 

Adonis lives, and Death " 992 

that Adonis is alive " 1009 

But when Adonis lived " 1085 

then would Adonis weep " 1090 

thus was Adonis slain " 1111 

to her Adonis' breath " 1172 

Describe Adonis Son 53 5 

With young Adonis P P 4 2 

tarriance for Adonis made "64 

Anon Adonis comes "96 

Venus with young Adonis " 11 1 

she clipp'd Adonis in her arms " 11 6 

Adore — the capitol that we ... . R L 1835 

adore his beauty still Son 7 7 

youth, I do adore thee P P 12 9 

Adored — by this devil R L 85 

Adorn — open to ... . the day " 399 

A-doting — 

as she wrought thee, fell .... Son 20 10 

Adulterate — 

The death of Lucrece R L 1645 

false adulterate eyes Son 121 5 

his foul adulterate heart L C 175 

Advance — 

low declined honour to ... . R L 1705 

all my art, and dost advance Son 78 13 

O, then advance of yours L C 225 

Advantage — ^let not .... slip V A 129 

to take advantage " 405 

Advantage on the kingdom Son 64 6 

advantage should achieve " 67 3 

this advantage found " 153 2 

For this advantage still L C 123 

Advantage — groan advantage thee V A 950 



ADVERSE 



AGAINST 



Adverse— 

Thy .... party is thy advocate Son 35 10 
Advice — . ... is sporting while infec- 
tion breeds -R L 907 

swallow up his sound advice " 1409 

advice is often seen L C 160 

Advised — O. be .... ; thou know'st VA 615 

sworn to this advised doom B L 1849 

by advised respects Son 49 4 

Advisedly — . . . . she marketh VA 457 

thus speaks advisedly Ji L 180 

she advisedly perused " 1527 

and arm his long-hid wits advisedly " 1816 

Advocate — adverse party is thy .... Son 35 10 

MtMit — As smoke from .... R L 1042 

Afar — may read the mot .... " 830 

chase thee afar behind Son 143 10 

Afeard — And wast to scratch R L 1035 

Affable— That familiar ghost Son 86 9 

Aft'airs — His honour, his .... R L 45 

or your affairs suppose Son 57 10 

To stand in thy affairs " 151 12 

Affected — to thine own face .... VA 157 

Affectedly— silk feat and .... LC 48 

Affection— is a coal VA 387 

Affection faints not " 569 

himself Affection's sentinel " 650 

Affection is my captain R L 271 

affection's course control " 500 

wrong thy true affection so " 1060 

Made old offences of affections new Son 110 4 

And nice affections wavering stood i C 97 

Throw my affections in his charmed 

power " 146 

my affection put to the smallest teen " 192 

trophies of affections hot " 218 

Afflict— him in his bed R L 975 

Afflicted — fancy fastly drew L C 61 

Afford— too much talk .... RL 1106 

next vouchsafe t' afford " 1305 

in thy cheek : he can afford Son 79 11 

that able spirit affords " 85 7 

which wondrous scope affords " 105 12 

Afloat— will hold me up ... . "80 9 

Afraid— that they are ... . VA 898 

of my holy vows afraid L C 179 

but seems afraid PP 18 30 

Afresh— And weep Son 30 7 

AffriiJcht^his lewd eyes .... RL 971 

to affright mine eye " 1138 

After— like sunshine .... rain VA 799 

tempest after sun " 800 

Which after him she darts " 817 

And would say after her " 852 

Long after fearing " 1036 

after supper long he questioned R L 122 

Till after a deep groan " 1276 

old Priam after slew " 1522 

after many accents and delays " 1719 

after yourself 's decease Son 13 7 

After a thousand victories " 25 10 

imitated after you " 53 6 

after I am gone " 71 14 

Alter my death, dear love " 72 3 

As after sunset fadeth " 73 6 

after their lord's decease " 97 8 

Drawn after you, you pattern " 98 12 

after that which flies " 143 9 

after new love bearing " 152 4 



After-loss — drop in for an .... Son 90 4 
Afterwards — should .... burn clearer "115 4 

Again — them dry ...., she seeks VA 52 

to kiss? then wink again " 121 

I'll give it thee again " 209 

and forth again " 273 

never lost again " 408 

breatheth life in her again * 474 

kill me once again " 499 

' you will fall again " 769 

she untreads again " 908 

And, sighing it again " 930 

opens them again " „... 960 

make them wet again " 966 

chaos comes again " — 1020 

creep forth again " 1036 

wound the heart with looks again " 1042 

whet his teeth at him again " 1113 

return again in haste R L 321 

Then Collatine again, by Lucrece " 381 

what he would lose again " 688 

should not peep again " 788 

till he return again " 1359 

Retire again, till meeting " 1441 

his breath drinks up again " 1666 

fountain clears itself again " 1707 

Lucrece, live again and see " 1770 

He doth again repeat " 1848 

Yourself again, after yourself 's Son 13 7 
not to give back again " 22 14 
come back again, assured " 45 11 
I send them back again " 45 14 
To-morrow see again " 56 7 
Spending again what is " 76 12 
and pays it thee again " 79 8 
back again is swerving " 87 8 
Comes home again, on better judg- 
ment " 87 12 
I return again " 109 6 

He again desires her L C 66 

do again for such a sake " 322 

Would yet again betray " 328 

and come again to-morrow PP 14 5 

again to make me wander " 14 10 

Against— strive the stream V A 772 

'gainst venom'd sores " 916 

Against the welkin volleys out " 921 

Against the golden splendour R L 25 

Against love's fire fear's frost hath " 355 

against long-living laud " 622 

For now against himself " 717 

Against the unseen secrecy " 763 

against proportion'd course " 774 

against himself to rave " 982 

And whiles against a thorn " 1135 

well, against my heart " 1137 

against the wither'd flower " 1254 

against my heart he set " 1640 

That 'gainst thyself thou stick'st Son 10 6 
Kothing 'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13 
Against this coming end " 13 3 
Against the stormy gusts " 13 11 
'gainst myself a lawful plea com- 
mence " 35 11 
stand against thy sight " 38 6 
Against that time, if ever " 49 1 
Against that time when thou " 49 5 
Against that time do I " 49 9 
against myself uprear " 49 11 



AGAINST 



ALAS 



Against — 'Gainst death and all-obliv- 
ious enmity Son 55 9 
eclipses 'gainst his glory fight " 60 7 
Against my love shall be " 63 1 
Against confounding age's cruel 

knife " 63 10 

Against the wreckful siege " 65 6 

which shake against the cold " 73 3 

against myself I'll fight " 88 3 

Against thy reasons " 89 4 

against myself I'll vow " 89 13 
Potions of eisel 'gainst my strong 

infection " 111 10 

When I against myself " 149 2 

against the thing they see " 152 12 

To swear against the truth " 152 14 

Against strange maladies " 153 8 

examples 'gainst her own content L C 157 

'gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 'gainst 

shame " 271 

that you make 'gainst mine •" 277 

Against the thing he sought " 313 

'Gainst whom the world P P 3 2 

Age— Thy mark is feeble ... . VA 941 

Teaching decrepit age " 1148 

the golden age to gild P L 60 

ease in waning age " 142 

wait on wrinkled age " 275 

he seeded in thine age " 603 

minute in an age " 962 

of the worn-out age " 1350 

my old age new born " 1759 

of thine age shalt see Son 3 11 

youth in his middle age "76 

Like feeble age, he reeleth " 7 10 

age and cold decay " 11 6 

The age to come would say " 17 7 

yellowed with their age " 17 9 

grown with this growing age " 32 10 

Painting my age with beauty " 62 14 

to age's steepy night " 63 5 

Against confounding age's " 63 10 

of outworn buried age " 04 2 

Doubting the filching age " 75 6 

And to be praised of ages " 101 12 

hear this, thou age unbred " 104 13 

olives of endless age " 107 8 

dust and injury of age " 108 10 

In the old age " 127 1 

And age in love " 138 12 

through lattice of sear'd age L C 14 

And, privileged by age " 62 

in the charity of age " ...^. 70 

Not age, but sorrow " 74 

And age, in love P P 1 12 

Crabbed age and youth " 12 1 

age is full of care " 12 2 

age like winter weather " 12 3 

age like winter bare " 12 4 

age's breath is short " 12 5 

age is lame " 12 6 

age is weak and cold " 12 7 

and age is tame " 12 8 

Age, I do abhor thee " 12 9 

Age, I do defy thee " 12 11 

When time with age " 19 46 

Aged — The man that coffers P L 855 

of time in aged things " 941 

Agentr— His other agents aim VA 400 



Aggravate — to .... thy store Son 146 10 

Agree — with his proud sight agrees VA 288 

his mood with nought agrees P i 1095 

and sweet poetry agree P P 8 1 

Agreeing — with his gust is 'greeing Son 114 11 

Ague — agues pale and faint VA 739 

All — . . . . ! if thou issueless Son 9 3 

Ah, but those tears " 34 13 

But, ah, thought kills me " 44 9 

Ah, wherefore with infection " 67 1 

Ah, do not, when my heart " 90 5 

Ah, yet doth beauty " 104 9 

ah, my love well knows " 139 9 

But, ah, whoever shunu'd i C 155 

ah, fool too froward P P 4 14 

Ah, that I had my lady " 11 13 

Ah, neither be my share " 14 1 

Ah, thought I, thou mourn'st " 21 19 

Aid— by whose swift VA 1190 

keep them from thy aid P L 912 

began to promise aid " 1696 

in his poor heart's aid " 1784 

did call upon thy aid Son 79 1 

Giving him aid, my verse " 86 8 

All aid, themselves made fairer L C 117 

Aldauce — the .... of the tongue VA 330 

Aim — His other agents .... " 400 

Mistakes that aim, and cleaves " 942 

The aim of all P L 141 

And in this aim " 143 

End thy ill aun " 579 

of his all-hurting aim L C 310 

Air — moisture, .... of grace VA 64 

His nostrils drink the air " 273 

As air and water " G54 

ravish the morning air £ L 778 

that in air consumes " 1042 

The dispersed air " 1805 

That heaven's air Son 21 8 

fix'd in heaven's air " 21 12 

slight air and purging fire " 45 1 

in heaven's sweetest air " 70 4 

in the wanton air P P 17 4 

'Air,' quoth he " 17 9 

Air, would I might " 17 10 

Airy — the .... scale of praise L C 22G 

Ajnx— In and Ulysses P L 1.394 

In Ajax' eyes blunt rage " 1398 

Alabaster— in an band VA 3G3 

her alabaster skin P L 419 

Alack — '....', what were it " 1156 

But, out, alack ! he was Son 33 11 

meditation ! where, alack " 65 9 

Alack, what poverty " 103 1 

alack, too timely shaded P P 10 3 

On a day, alack the day " 17 1 

Vow, alack ! for youth unmeet " 17 13 

Alarm — To love's alarms VA 424 

Gives false alarms " 651 

rash alarm to know P L .... 473 

Alarum — Anon their loud alarums VA 700 

heart, alarum striking P L 433 

Alas — '...., he nought esteems VA 631 

' Alas, poor world " 1075 

Alas, how many bear P L 832 

From that, alas, thy Lucreee " 1624 

Alas, 'tis true I have gone Son HO 1 

Alas, why, fearing " 115 9 

alas, it was a spite P P 16 7 



ALAS 



ALL 



Alas— .....she could not help it P P 16 12 

But, alas ! my hand " 17 11 

Alchemy — with heavenly .... Son 33 4 

taught it this alchemy " 114 4 

Alien — As every pen " 78 3 

Allghtr-to thy steed VA 13 

Alike — Since all ... . my songs Son 105 3 

lAlive— still is left ... . VA 174 

j that Adonis is alive " 1009 

What face remains alive " 1076 

faltering feeble souls alive J2 L 1768 

of yours alive that time Son 17 13 

nor I to none alive " 112 7 

None alive will pity me P P 21 28 

All — Stain to ..... nymphs VA 9 

devouring all in haste " 57 

making her cheeks all wet " 83 

all compact of fire " 149 

All swoln with chafing " 325 

For all askance he holds " 342 

And all this dumb play " 359 

All whole as thine " 370 

For all my mind " 383 

And all but with a breath " 414 

And all amazed brake off " 469 

and all the earth " 484 

borrow'd all their shine " 488 

she takes all she can, not all she 

listeth " 564 

and picks them all " 576 

All is imaginary " 597 

But all in vain " 607 

all the world amazes " 634 

all stain'd with gore " 664 

desire sees best of all " 720 

And all is but to rob " 723 

of all these maladies " 745 

And all in vain " 772 

Love is all truth " 804 

That all the neighbor caves " 830 

they answer all " 851 

patron of all night " 860 

And all in haste " 870 

all strain courtesy " 888 

her senses all dismay'd " 896 

bepainted all with red " 901 

through all her sinews " 903 

nought at all respecting " 911 

In hand with all things, nought at 

allafi'ecting " 912 

all other eyes to see " 9J52 

All entertain'd each passion " 969 

join they all together " 971 

called him ail to nought " 993 

of all mortal things " 996 

And there all smother'd " 1035 

That all love's pleasure " 1140 

to all discontents " 1161 

all in post P L 1 

Neglected all with swift intent " 46 

Which, having all, all could not 

satisfy " 96 

The aim of all , " 141 

That one for all or all for one " 144 

the death of all, and all together " 147 

all for want of wit " 153 

including all foul harms " 199 

All pure effects " 251 

All orators are dumb " 268 



All— they rate his ill P L 304 

But all these poor forbiddings " 323 

heart of all her land " 439 

with all my might " 488 

All this beforehand " 494 

all the power of both " 572 

'AH which together " 589 

To all the host " 598 

all that brood to kill " 627 

If all these petty ills " 656 

Feeble Desire, all recreant " 710 

That all the faults " 804 

all sins past and all that are " 923 

Thou nursest all and murder'st all " 929 

My tongue shall utter all " 1076 

to all fair eyes " 1083 

And to herself all sorrow " 1102 

And all my fame " 1203 

all the little worms " 1248 

through all her body spread " 1266 

smeared all with dust " 1381 

his beard all silver white " 1405 

All jointly listening " 1410 

all boU'n and red " 1417 

where all distress is stell'd " 1444 

all distress and dolour dwelled " 1446 

Of all the Greeks " 1470 

Here, all enraged " 1562 

Which all this time " 1576 

To tell them all " 1617 

all the task it hath to say " 1618 

unless I took all patiently " 1641 

Comes all too late " 1686 

they all at once began " 1709 

and all his lordly crew " 1731 

all the beauty of my glass " 1763 

By all our country rights " 1838 

where all thy beauty lies Son 2 5 

Where all the treasure "26 

AVho, all in one " 8 12 

If all were minded so " 11 7 

sable curls all silver'd o'er' " 12 4 

all girded up in sheaves " 12 7 

And all in war with Time " 15 13 

number all your graces " 17 6 

hath all too short a date " 18 4 

and all her fading sweets " 19 7 

all 'hues' in his controlling " 20 7 

and all things rare " 21 7 

For all that beauty " 22 5 

And all the rest forgot " 25 12 

all naked, will bestow it " 26 8 

I all alone beweep " 29 2 

All losses are restored " 30 14 

endeared with all hearts " 31 1 

and all love's loving parts " 31 3 

And all those friends " 31 4 

who all their parts " 31 11 

thou, all they, hast all the all of me " 31 14 

ransom all ill deeds " 34 14 

All men make faults and " 35 5 

Take all my comfort " 37 4 

these all, or all or more " 37 6 

of all thy glory live " 37 12 

art all the better part of rae " 39 2 
Take all my loves, my love, yea 

take them all " 40 1 

all mine was thine " 40 4 

steal thee all my poverty " 40 10 



ALL 



10 



ALL 



AH — in whom ill well shows Son 

it is not all my grief " 

For all the day they view " 

All days are nights to see " 

all tenants to the heart " 

all art of beauty set " 

In all external grace " 

eyes of all posterity " 

time at all to spend " 

In sequent toil all forwards dp " 

with others all too near " 

possesseth all mine eye " 
all my soul and all my every part " 
As I all other in all worths surmount " 

And all those beauties " 

Tired with all these for restful " 

Tired with all these from these " 
Without all ornament itself and 

true " 

All tongues the voice of souls " 

seals up all in rest " 

Without all bail shall carry " 

Sometime all full with feasting " 

on all, or all away " 

I still all one, ever the same " 

So all my best is dressing " 

Thou art all my art " 

had all thy gentle grace " 

spends all his might " 

to all the world must die " 
When all the breathers of this 

world " 

by all the Muses filed " 

of all too precious you " 

bonds in thee are all determinate " 

bending all my loving thoughts " 

myself will bear all wrong " 
All these I better in one general 

best " 

of all men's pride I boast " 

All this away and me " 

And all things turn " 

strength of all thy state " 

dressed in all his trim " 

you pattern of all those " 

of all his growth " 

gives thee all thy might " 

argument, all bare is of more " 

since all alike my songs " 

is all ray argument " 

so all their praises " 

all you prefiguring " 
All fraUties that besiege all kinds 

of love " 

nothing all thy sum of good " 

in it thou art my all " 

but, by all above " 

Now all is done " 

You are my all the world " 

I throw all care " 

That all the world besides " 

That I have scanted all " 

Whereto all bonds " 

to all the winds " 

All men are bad " 

Beyond all date even to eternity " 

But all alone stands hugely " 

Lose all and more " 

All this the world well knows " 



40 


13 


42 


1 


43 


2 


43 


13 


46 


10 


53 


,7 


53 


13 


55 


11 


57 


3 


60 


4 


61 


14 


62 


1 


62 


2 


62 


8 


63 


6 


66 


1 


66 


13 


68 


10 


69 


3 


73 


8 


74 


2 


75 


9 


75 


14 


76 


5 


76 


11 


78 


13 


79 


2 


80 


3 


81 


6 


81 


12 


85 


4 


86 


2 


87 


4 


83 


10 


88 


14 


91 


8 


91 


12 


91 


14 


95 


12 


96 


12 


98 


2 


98 


12 


99 


12 


100 


2 


103 


3 


105 


3 


105 


9 


106 


9 


106 


10 


109 


10 


109 


12 


109 


14 


110 


6 


110 


9 


112 


5 


112 


9 


112 


14 


117 


1 


117 


4 


117 


7 


121 


14 


122 


4 


124 


11 


125 


6 


129 


13 



All— And .... they foul that Son 132 14 

and all that is in me " 133 14 

put'st forth all to use " 134 10 

The sea, all water " 135 9 

Think all but one " 135 14 

where all men ride " 137 6 

makes all swift dispatch " 143 3 

not so true as all men's " 148 8 

Am of myself all tyrant " 149 4 

When all my best " 149 11 

thy worst all best exceeds " 150 8 

all my vows are oaths " 152 7 

And all my honest faith " 152 8 

scythed all that youth begun LC 12 

Nor youth all quit " 13 

In clamours of all size " 2] 

but where excess begs all " 42 

stuck over all his face " 81 

All aids, themselves " 117 

but were all graced by him " 119 

All kind of arguments " 121 

All replication prompt " 122 

Catching all passions " 126 

gave him all my flower " 147 

All my offences that abroad " 183 

Lo, all these trophies " 218 

Take all these similes " 227 

And now, to tempt aU " 252 

Have emptied aU their fountains " 255 

pour your ocean all among " 256 

your victory us all congest " 258 

All vows and consecrations " 263 

art all, and all things " 266 

The aloes of all forces " .."... 273 

Now all these hearts " 274 

All melting ; though our drops " 300 

all strange forms receives " 303 

O, all that borrow'd motion " 327 

cures all disgrace in me P P 3 8 

Where all those pleasures "56 

All ignorant that soul that "59 

all in love forlorn " 6 3 

all her pure pretestings " 7 11 

and all were jestiugs " 7 12 

As passing all conceit "88 

and left her all alone " 9 14 

All unseen 'gan passage find " 17 6 

All is amiss " 18 4 

All my merry jigs " 18 9 

All my lady's love is lost " 18 10 

Wrought all my loss " 18 14 

All fears scorn I " 18 20 

All help needing " 18 24 

Plays not at all " 18 30 

Flocks all sleeping " 18 42 

All our pleasure known " 18 45 

All our merry meetings " 18 46 

All our evening sport " 18 47 

All our love is lost ' " 18 48 

cause of all my moan " 18 51 

frame all thy ways " 19 25 

all. the joys in bed " 19 47 

all the pleasures prove " 20 2 

all the craggy mountains " 20 4 

all with leaves of myrtle " 20 12 

as all forlorn " 21 9 

All thy friends are " 21 24 

All thy fellow birds " 21 25 

Grace in all simplicity P T 54 



ALLAYED 



11 



AM 



Allayed — by feeding is ... . Son 56 3 
All-eating — AVere au .... shame "28 

Allege — I can .... no cause " 49 1-t 

All-hiding— thy black cloak iJ L 801 

All-hurting — of his .... aim L C 310 

All-oblivious— and .... enmity Son 55 9 

Allotted — reproach to him ... . Ji L 824 

Allow — did his words ... . " 1845 

untainted do allow Son 19 11 

my bad, my good allow " 112 4 

All-too-timeless — His .... speed Ji L 44 

All-triumphant — 

With splendour Son 33 10 

Allure — favours to ... . his eye P P 'i 6 

Almighty— by high Jove B L 568 

Almost-^Is .... choked " 282 

almost hid behind " 1413 

myself almost despising Son 29 9 

doth almost tell my name " 76 7 

And almost thence my nature " 111 6 

Alms— that by doth live R L 986 

Aloe— The aloes of all forces L C 273 

Aloft^- 

shakes .... Ms Roman blade PL 505 

ignorance aloft to fly Son 78 6 

Alone— but the eye ... . VA 213 

leave me here alone " 382 

■while now it sleeps alone " 786 

But I alone alone must sit P L 795 

alone committed, light alone " 1480 

traffic with thyself alone Son 4 9 

I all alone beweep my outcast state " 29 2 

now is thine alone " 31 12 

by me be borne alone " 36 4 

which thou deservest alone " 39 8 

then she loves but me alone " 42 14 

being made of four, with two alone " 45 7 

I leave my love alone " 66 14 
Then thou alone kingdoms of hearts 

shouldst owe " 70 14 

to be with you alone " 75 7 

Whilst I alone did call upon thy aid " 79 1 
My verse alone had all thy gentle 

grace " 79 2 
Than this rich praise that you alone 

are you " 84 2 

Wretched in this alone " 91 13 

have often lived alone " 105 13 

But all alone stands hugely politic " 124 11 

Although I swear it to myself alone " 131 8 

Is 't not enough to torture me alone " 133 3 

To any sensual feast with thee alone " 141 8 

and left her all alone PP 9 14 

Must live alone " 18 53 

Save the nightingale alone " 21 8 
Along — So soon was she .... as he 

was down V A 43 

the lion walk'd along " 1093 

Aloof— from judgement stand .... L C 168 

Aloud — snorts and neighs .... V A 262 

dogs exclaim aloud " 886 

Already — ^to those .... spent P. L 1589 

what is already spent Son 76 12 

Altar — Over my altars hath he hung r^ 103 

Since I their altar LC 224 

Alter — but .... not his taste P L 651 

and alter their contents " 948 

Which though it alter not love's 

sole eftect Son 36 7 



■"ore 116 


3 


" 116 


11 


" 116 


3 


" 93 


3 


" 145 


9 


" 115 


8 


'A 


598 



Alter — Whicli alters when it altera- 
tion finds (! 
Love alters not with his brief hours 

Alteration — when it ... . finds 

Alter'd — though alter'd new 
'I hate' she alter'd with an end 

Altering — to the course of ... . things 

Although — . ... he mount her \ 
Although our undivided loves are 

one Son 36 2 

Although thou steal thee " 40 10 

although my foot did stand " 44 5 

although to-day thou fill ." 56 5 

although their eyes were kind " 69 11 

Although in me each part " 81 4 

although his height be taken " 116 8 

Although I swear it to myself alone " 131 8 

Although she knows my days " 138 6 

Although I know my years P P 1 6 

Altogether— or .... balk P L 696 

Always — doth .... fresh remain VA 801 

I always write of you Son 76 9 

Serve always with assured trust P P 19 31 

Am— What I that thou VA 205 

I am such a park " 239 

thou wert as I am " 369 

I am bereft him so " 381 

O, where am I " 493 

'I am,' quoth he " 718 

more am I accurst " 1120 

Under that colour am I come P L 481 

Yet am I guilty " 841 

So am I now " 1049 

I am the mistress of my fate " 1069 

shall not persuade me I am old Son 22 1 

I that love and am beloved " 25 13 

That am debarr'd the benefit " 28 2 

then I am not lame " 37 9 

I in thy abundance am sufficed " 37 11 

When I am sometime absent " 41 2 

I am not thought " 44 9 

And I am still with them " 47 12 

So am I as the rich " 52 1 

I am to wait though waiting so " 58 13 

O, sure I am the wits of former days " 59 13 

my love shall be as I am now " 63 1 

mourn for me when I am dead " 71 1 

Give warning to the world that I 

am fled " 71 3 
I perhaps compounded am with 

clay " 71 10 

after I am gone " 71 14 

For I am shamed " 72 13 

I am a worthless boat " 80 11 

When I in earth am rotten " 81 2 

wherein I am attainted " 88 7 

To whom I am confined " 110 12 

No, I am that I am " 121 9 

I am forsaken " 133 7 

Perforce am thine " 133 14 

And I myself am mortgaged " 134 2 

And yet am I not free " 134 14 
More than enough am I that vex 

thee still " 1:35 3 
And wherefore say not I that I am 

old " 138 10 

but since I am near slain " 139 13 

Past cure I am " 147 9 

Am of myself, all tyrant " 149 4 



AM 



12 



AND 



Am — ^thou lovest, and I . . . . blind Son 149 14 

thou know'st I am forsworn " 152 1 

I am perjured most " 152 6 

tell your judgement I am old LC 73 

say not I that I am old P P 1 10 

in deep delight am chiefly drown'd " 8 11 

Amain — ^Venusmakes .... unto him VA 5 

Amaze — all the world amazes " 634 

to amaze his foes " 684 

Amazed — And all ... . " 469 

amazed, as one that unaware " 823 

poor people are amazed " 925 

She, much amazed R L 446 

make him more amazed " 1356 

Amazedly — . ... in her sad face " 1591 

Amazeth — and women's souls .... S<m 20 8 

Ambassag:e — this written .... "26 3 
Amber — 

Of .... , crystal, and of beaded jet L C 37 

With coral clasps and amber studs P P 20 14 

Ambition— Yet their R L 68 

in Tarquin new ambition bred " 411 

Ambitious — 

And this .. ..foul infirmity " 150 

Ambush — Or lain in " 233 

the ambush of young days Son 70 9 

Amen — still cry 'Amen " 85 6 

Amend — return to make amends R L 961 

what shall be thy amends Son 101 1 

sickly radiance do amend L C 214 

Amended — that cannot be ... . R L 578 

Amending — can give the fault .... " 1614 

Amid — 

famish them their plenty VA 20 

Amiss — salving thy .... Son 35 7 

for invention, bear amiss " 59 3 

urge not my amiss " 151 3 

All is amiss P P 18 4 

Among — a flock of sheep V A 685 

among the wastes of time Son 12 10 

Weeds among flowers " 124 4 

Among a number " 136 8 

Among the many L C 190 

pour your ocean all among " 256 

Amongst — 'Mongst our mourners 

shalt thou go P T 20 

Amorous — and his .... spoil L C 154 

Amorously — metal impleach'd " 205 

Amplify— sonnets that did " 209 

An — hour but short VA 23 

Even as an empty eagle " 55 

An oven that is stopp'd " 331 

in an alabaster band " 363 

like an earthquake " 648 

an angry-chafing boar " 662 

an image like thyself " 664 

suck'd an earthly mother " 863 

one that spies an adder " 878 

cleaves an infant's heart " 942 

an orient drop beside " 981 

one minute in an hour " 1187 

An expired date R L 26 

men without an orator " 30 

And be an eye-sore " 205 

bear an ever-daring blame " 224 

or an old man's saw " 244 

Show'd like an April daisy " 395 

batter such an ivory wall " 464 

Only he hath an eye " 496 



An — enters at iron gate R L 595 

When wilt thou sort an hour " 899 

An accessary by thine " 922 

One poor retiring minute in an age " 962 

would such an office have " 1000 

with an infringed oath " 1061 

Like an unpractised swimmer " 109S 

These means as frets upon an in- 
strument " 1140 

an eager combat fight " 1298 

Griped in an armed hand " 1425 

An humble gait, calm looks " 1508 

As through an arch " 1667 

Were an all-eating shame Son 2 8 

Look, what an unthrift "99 

in the world an end " 9 11 

metre of an antique song " 17 12 

An eye more bright " 20 5 

As an unperfect actor " 23 1 

Then can I drown an eye " 30 5 

That I an accessary needs must be " 35 13 

proud as an enjoyer " 75 5 

And do not come in for an after-loss " 90 4 

thy name blesses an ill report " 95 8 

as an idol show " 105 2 

to try an older friend " 110 11 

it is an ever-fixed mark " IIG 5 

To keep an adjunct " 122 13 

she alter'd with an end " 145 9 

but an art of craft LC 295 

To break an oath P P 3 14 

with such an earthly tongue " 5 14 

Under an osier "65 

dead within an hour " 13 6 

Till looking on an Englishman " 16 3 

Juno but an Ethiope were " 17 16 

with an outward show " 19 38 

Anatomized — 

In her the painter had . , . . R L 1450 

Anchored — Be anchor'd in the bay Son 137 6 

Ancient — 

from ravens' wings R L 949 

And — . . . . like a bold-faced suitor V A 6 

more white and red " 10 

And rein his proud head " 14 

Here come and sit " 17 

And being set I'll smother " 18 

And yet not cloy " 19 

Making them red and pale " 21 

of pith and livelihood " 26 

And, trembling in her passion " 27 

Who blush'd and pouted " 33 

red and hot as coals " 35 

stalled up, and even now " 39 

And govern'd him " 42 

on their elbows and their hips " 44 

And 'gins to chide " 46 

And kissing speaks " 47 

sighs and golden hairs " 51 

fan and blow them dry ■' 52 

feathers, flesh and bone " 56 

And where she ends " 60 

and breatheth in her face " 62 

And calls it heavenly " 64 

shame and awed resistance " 69 

and prettily entreats " 73 

he lours and frets " 75 

shame and anger ashy-pale " 76 

and being white " 77 



AND 



13 



AND 



And— And by her fair VA 80 

And one sweet kiss " 84 

and turns his lips " " 90 

stern and direful god of war " 98 

my captive and my slave " 101 

And begg'd for that " 102 

And for my sake hath leam'd to 

sport and dance " ..... 105 

dally, smile, and jest " 100 

drum and ensign red " 107 

And I will wink " 122 

Hot and consume themselves " 182 

despised, rheumatic, and cold " 135 

lean and lacking juice " 136 

Mine eyes are grey, aud bright, and 

quick in turning " 140 

flesh is soft and plump " ..... 142 

And yet no footing seen " 148 

light and will aspire " 150 

sweet boy, and may it be " ..... 1-55 

and complain on theft " 160 

And died to kiss " 162 

and sappy plants to bear " 165 

and beauty breedeth " 167 

And so, in spite of death " 173 

And Titan, tired " 177 

and by Venus' side " 180 

And now Adonis " 181 

And with a heavy " 182 

young, and so unkind " ..... 187 
And, lo, I lie between that sun and 

thee " 194 

And were I not immortal " 197 

this heavenly and earthly sun " 198 

and canst not feel " 201 

And one for interest " 210 

cold and senseless stone " 211 

image dull and dead " 212 

And swelling passion " 218 

Eed cheeks and fiery eyes " 219 

And now she weeps, and now she 

fain " 221 

And now her sobs " 222 

and then his hand " 223 

And when from thence *' 227 

and thou shalt be my deer " 231 

and if those hills be dry " 233 

bottom-grass and high delightful 

plain " 236 

obscure and rough " ..... 237 

tempest and from rain " 233 

and there he could not die " 246 

And from her twining arms " 256 

and hasteth to his horse " 258 

lusty, young, and proud " 260 

And forth she rushes, snorts and 

neighs aloud " 262 

and to her straight " 2B4 

And now his woven girths " 266 

and forth again " 273 

courage and his high desire " 276 

majesty and modest pride " «... 278 

curvets and leaps " 279 

And this I do " 281 

and nothing else he sees " 287 

colour, pace, and bone " 294 

fetlocks shag and long " 295 

small head and nostrils wide " 296 

straight legs and passing strong " 297 



And—. . . . there he stares VA 301 

And whether he run " 804 

through his mane and tail " 305 

and neighs unto her " 307 

and scorns the heat " 311 

and bites the poor flies " 316 

and his fury was assuaged " 313 

and left Adonis there " 322 

boisterous and unruly " 326 

And now the happy season " 327 

and begins to glow " 3.37 

And with his bonnet " 839 

How white and red " 346 

pale, and by and by " 347 

And like a lowly lover " 350 

And all this dumb play " 359 

wilful and unwilling " 365 

and 1 a man " ,.„. 369 

and thou shalt have it " 374 

And being steel'd ' " 876 

let go and let me go " 379 

And 'tis your fault " 331 

and leave me here alone " ,.,.. 382 

And learn of him " 404 

And once made perfect " 408 

and then I chase it " 410 

and I will not owe it " ..,.. 411 
That laughs, and weeps, and all but 

with a breath " „,.. 414 

shapeless and unflnish'd " 415 

colt that's back'd aud burdeu'd " 419 

and never waxeth strong " ,„.. 420 

And leave this idle theme " 422 

And heart's deep-sore wounding " 432 

inward beauty and invisible " 434 

And that I could not " 440 

And nothing but the very " 441 

Being nurse and feeder " 446 

And bid Suspicion " 448 

Gusts and foul flaws to herdmen 

and to herds " 450 

and at his look " 463 

And love by looks " 464 

And all amazed brake off " 469 

and she, by her good will " 479 

and all the earth " 484 

And as the bright sun " 485 

and life was death's annoy " 497 

and death was lively joy " 498 

* and such disdain " 501 

And these mine eyes " 502 

And as they last " 507 

thou wilt buy, and pay, and use 

good dealing " 514 

And pay them at thy leisure " 518 

and quickly gone " 520 

And coal-black clouds " 533 

and bid good night " 534 

and so say you " 535 

and ere he says 'Adieu " 537 

and backward drew " 541 

and glutton-like she feeds " 548 

And having felt " 553 

Her face doth reek and smoke " 555 

And careless lust " 556 

and honour's wrack " ..... 558 

Hot, faint, and weary " ..... 539 

and now no more resisteth " 568 

And yields at last " 566 



AND 



14 



AND 



And— Foul words .... frowns VA 573 

and picks them all at last " 576 

and look well to her heart " 580 

And on his neck " 592 

and to lack her joy " 600 

and pine the maw " 602 

and yet she is not loved " 610 

And whom he strikes " 624 

and embracing bushes " 629 

sweet lips and crystal eyne " 633 

and my joints did tremble " ..•• 642 

and fell I not downright " 645 

beats, and takes no rest " 647 

And in a peaceful hour " 652 

air and water do abate " 654 

and whispers in mine ear " 659 

And more than so " 661 

with grief and hang the head " 666 

And fear doth teach it " 670 

And on thy well-breath'd horse " 678 

And when thou hast " 679 

and with what care " 681 

He cranks and crosses " 682 

And sometime where " 687 

And sometime sorteth " 689 

And now his grief " 701 

Turn, and return " 704 

And being low " 708 

and hear a little more " 709 

this to that and so to so " 713 

and then the story aptly ends " 716 

And now 'tis dark, and going I shall 

fall " 719 

And all is but to rob " 723 

cloudy and forlorn " 725 

Steal a kiss, and die forsworn " 726 

and her by night " 732 

And therefore hath she " 733 

And pure perfection " 736 

and much misery " 738 

agues pale and faint " 739 

and frenzies wood " 740 

grief and damn'd despair " 743 

And not the least " 745 

hue and qualities " 747 

wasted, thaw'd, and done " 749 

and self-loving nuns " 752 

And barren dearth of daughters 

and of sons " 754 

And all in vain " 7V2 

like you worse and worse " 774 

And every tongue " 776 

And will not let " 780 

And then my little heart " 783 

stains and soon bereaves " 797 

And homeward through the dark " 813 

merciless and pitchy night " 821 

and now she beats " 829 

and twenty times ' Woe, woe " 833 

And twenty echoes " 834 

And sings extemporally " 836 

and old men dote " 837 

And still the choir " 840 

and outwore the night " 841 

and are never done " 846 

And would say after her " 852 

And wakes the morning " 855 

cedar tops and hills " 858 

and patron of all light " 860 



And — . ... shining star doth borrow VA 861 

and yet she hears " 867 

and for his horn " 868 

And all in haste " 870 

And as she runs " 871 

make him shake and shudder " 880 

and her spirit confounds " 882 

doubt and bloodless fear " 891 

and dare not stay " 894 

And childish error " 898 

And with that word " 900 

Like milk and blood " 902 

and now she will " 905 

And asks the weary " 914 

And there another " 915 

And here she meets " 917 

and he replies with howling " 918 

mourner, black and grim " 920 

Another and another answer " 922 

signs and prodigies " 926 

And, sighing it again " 930 

stifle beauty and to steal " 934 

breath and beauty set " 935 

and cleaves an infant's heart " 942 

And, hearing him " 944 

And not Death's ebon dart " 948 

And with his strong course opens " 960 

how her ej'es and tears did lend and 

borrow " 961 

and flatters her it is " 978 

and yet too credulous " 986 

Thy weal and woe " 987 

Despair, and hope " 988 

Adonis lives, and Death " 992 

and grave for kings " 995 

and never woman yet " 1007 

And that his beauty " 1011 

Statues, tombs and stories " 1013 

his triumphs and his glories " 1014 

a weak and silly mind " 1016 

lives and must not die " 1017 

And beauty dead " 1020 

And in her haste " 1029 

And there all smother'd " 1035 

their office and their light " 1039 

and never wound the heart " 1042 

and being open'd " 1051 

and seem'd with him " 1056 

And then she reprehends " 1065 

And yet,' quoth she " 1070 

colours fresh and trim " 1079 

lived and died with him " 1080 

and the wind doth hiss you " 1084 

Sun and sharp air " 1085 

And therefore would he " 1087 

and, being gone " 1089 

And straight, in pity " 1091 

and gently hear him " 1096 

And never fright " 1098 

and ripe-red cherries " 1103 

grim, and urchin-snouted " 1105 

kiss him and hath kill'd " 1110 

And nuzzling in his flank " 1115 

is dead, and never " 1119 

And stains her face " 1122 

and they are pale " 1123 

and that is cold " 1124 

and now no more " 1130 

And every beauty " 1132 



AND 



15 



AND 



And— false full of fraud VA 1141 

Bud, and be blasted " 1142 

and the top o'erstraw'd " 1143 

and teach the fool " 1146 

and too full of riot " 1147 

raging-mad and silly-mild " 1151 

merciful and too severe " 1155 

And most deceiving " 1156 

■war and dire events " 1159 

And set dissension 'twixt the son 

and sire " 1160 

subject and servile " 1161 

And in his blood " 1167 

pale cheeks and the blood " 1169 

And says, within her bosom " 1173 

and in the breach appears " 1175 

And so 'tis thine " 1181 

and 'tis thy right " 1184 

rock thee day and night " 1186 

And yokes her silver doves " 1190 

and not be seen " 1194 

And to Collatium R L 4 

And girdle with embracing " 6 

unmatched red and white " 11 

And, if possess'd, as soon decay'd 

and done " 23 

Honour and beauty " 27 

blasts, and ne'er grows old " 49 

beauty and virtue strived " 52 

cheeks, and call'd it then " 61 

beauty's red and virtue's white " 65 

war of lilies and of roses " 71 

And reverend welcome " 90 

And decks with praises " 108 

arms and wreaths of victory " 110 

And wordless so greets heaven " 112 

Mother of dread and fear " 117 

And in her vanity prison " 119 

and wore out the night " 123 

And every one to rest " 125 

Save thieves and cares and troubled 

minds " 126 

And when great treasure " 132 

They scatter and unloose it " 136 

And so, by hoping more " 137 

surfeit, and such griefs " 139 

wealth and ease " 142 

And in this aim " 143 

and oft that wealth " 146 

death of all, and all " 147 

And this ambitious " 150 

and, all for want of wit " 153 

And for himself " 157 

and wretched hateful days " 161 

and wolves' death-boding cries " 165 

are dead and still " 167 

While lust and murder wakes to 

stain and kill " 168 

And now this lustful lord " 169 

between desire and dread " 171 

And to the flame " 180 

and in his inward mind " 185 

And justly thus controls " 189 

and lend it not " 190 

And die, unhallow'd thoughts " 192 

That spots and stains " 196 

and to shining arrhs " 197 

And be an eye-sore " 205 

and hold it for no sin " 209 



And — . ... in a desperate rage R L .. 


.. 219 


And extreme fear " .. 


.. 230 


The shame and fault " .. 


.. 238 


but denial and reproving " ' .. 


.. 242 


conscience and hot-burning will " .. 


.. 247 


And with good thoughts " .. 


.. 248 


doth confound and kill " .. 


.. 250 


and doth so far proceed " .. 


.. 251 


And gazed for tidings " .. 


.. 254 


'And how her hand " .. 


.. 260 


and then it faster rock'd " .. 


.. 262 


and he leadeth " .. 


.. 271 


And when his gaudy banner " .. 


.. 272 


and will not be dismay'd " .. 


.. 273 


Respect and reason " .. 


.. 275 


Sad pause and deep regard " .. 


.. 277 


and beats these from the stage " .. 


.. 278 


and full of fond mistrust " .. 


.. 284 


and now invasion " .. 


.. 287 


And in the self-same seat " .. 


.. 289 


And therein heartens up " .. 


.. 295 


And as their captain " .. 


.. 268 


between her chamber and his will " .. 


.. 302 


little vents and crannies " .. 


.. 310 


And blows the smoke " .. 


.. 312 


And being lighted " .. 


.. 316 


And griping it " .. 


.. 319 


And give the sneaped birds " .. 


.. 333 


shelves and sands " .. 


.. 335 


and with no more " .. 


.. 339 


And they would stand " .. 


.. 347 


Then Love and Fortune " .. 


.. 351 


and misty night " .. 


.. 356 


And with his knee " .. 


.. 359 


And gazeth on " .. 


.. 366 


fair and fiery-pointed sun " .. 


.. 372 


and keep themselves enclosed " .. 


.. 378 


And holy-thoughted Lucrece " .. 


.. 384 


And canopied in darkness " .. 


.. 998 


And death's dim look " .. 


.. 403 


and death in life " .. 


.. 406 


And him by oath " .. 


.. 410 


And in his will " .. 


.. 417 


And they, like straggling slaves " .. 


.. 428 


bloody death and ravishment " ... 


.. 430 


and bids them " .. 


.. 4.34 


destitute and pale " .. 


.. 441 


their dear governess and lady " .. 


.. 443 


And fright her " ... 


.. 445 


dimm'd and controll'd " ... 


.. 448 


Wrapp'd and confounded " ... 


.. 456 


rise up and fall " ... 


.. 466 


more rage and lesser pity " ... 


.. 468 


To make the breach and enter " ... 


.. 469 


And the red rose " ... 


.. 479 


plead for me and tell " ... 


.. 480 


reproof and reason " ... 


. 489 


is deaf and hears no heedful friends " ... 


. 495 


And dotes on what he looks " ... 


. 497 


disdain and deadly enmity " ... 


. 503 


And in thy dead arms " ... 


. 517 


and thou, the author " ... 


. 523 


And sung by children " ... 


. 525 


and thy children's sake " ... 


. 533 


and makes a pause " ... 


. 541 


And moody Pluto winks " ... 


. 553 


And midst the sentence " ... 


. 566 


and sweet friendship's oath " ... 


. 569 


human law and common troth " ... 


. 571 



AND 



16 



AND 



And — By heaven .... earth, .... all 

the power i2 L 672 

and stoop to honour " 574 

rocky and wreck-threatening " 590 

and be compassionate " 594 

and if the same " 600 

'And wilt thou be " 617 

And makest fair reputation " 623 

and thou didst teach the way " 630 

and flattering thoughts retire " 641 

And wipe the dim mist " 643 

see thy state and pity mine " ^.... 644 

And with the wind " 648 

And, lo, then falls " 653 

And not the puddle " 65S 

and thou their slave " 659 

and they thy fouler grave " 661 

For light and lust " 674 

And he hath won " 6S8 

And Lvist, the thief, " 693 

And then with lank and lean " 708 

knit brow and strengthless pace " 709 

poor and meek " 710 

and when that decays " 713 

And by their mortal fault " 724 

and made her thrall " 725 

death and pain " 726 

And he the burthen " 735 

He scowls, and hates himself " 738 

He runs, and chides " 742 

And my true eyes " 748 

And therefore would they " 752 

And grave, like water that doth eat " 755 

against repose and rest " 757 

And bids her eyes " 758 

And bids it leap " 760 

Dim register and notary " 765 

tragedies and murders " 766 

treason and the ravisher " 770 

vaporous and foggy Night " 771 

And let thy misty vapours " 782 

and make perpetual night " 784 

And fellowship in woe " 790 

and hang their heads " 793 

and hide their infamy " 794 

must sit and pine " 795 

And fright her crying babe " 814 

And undeserved reproach " 824 

And Tarquiu's eye " 830 

and I, a drone-like bee " 836 

But robb'd and ransack'd " 838 

And suck'd the honey " 840 

And talk'd of virtue " 846 

cramps and gouts and painful fits " 856 

And scarce hath eyes " 857 

and useless barns " 859 

And leaves it to be master'd " 863 

and they too strong " 865 

And in thy shady cell " 881 

and displacest laud " 887 

And bring him where his suit " 898 

Wrath, envy, treason, rape, and 

murder's rages " 909 

Truth and Virtue " 911 

and thou art well appaid " 914 

murder and of theft " 918 

perjury and subornation " 919 

forgery and shift " 920 

all sins past and all that are " 923 



And— nursest all ... , murder'st all R L ., 


.. 929 


and enchained me " ,. 


.. 934 


and bring truth to light " ,. 


.. 940 


and sentinel the night " .. 


.. 942 


And smear with dust " .. 


.. 945 


and alter their contents " .. 


... 948 


and cherish springs " .. 


.. 950 


And turn the giddy round " .. 


... 952 


unicorn and lion wild " .. 


... 956 


And waste huge stones " .. 


.. 959 


prevent this storm and shun " .. 


.. 966 


And the dire thought " .. 


... 972 


And let mild women " .. 


... 979 


And time to see " .. 


... 986 


And merry fools to mock " .. 


... 9S9 


and how swift and short " .. 


... 991 


and his time of sport ^' .. 


... 992 


And ever let his unrecalling crime " .. 


... 993 


good and bad " .. 


... 995 


And unperceived fly " .. 


... 1010 


at Tarquin and uncheerful Night " .. 


... 1024 


And wast afeard to scratch " .. 


... 1035 


kill both thyself and her " .. 


... 1036 


' I live, and seek in vain " .. 


... 1044 


And therefore now I need not fear " ., 


... 1052 


And with my trespass " .. 


... 1070 


And solemn night with slow sad 




gait " „ 


.. 1081 


And therefore still •' .. 


... 1085 


And seems to point her out " .. 


.. 1087 


fond and testy " .. 


... 1094 


And to herself " .. 


... 1102 


And as one shifts " .. 


... 1104 


her grief isdumb and hath no words " .. 


.. 1105 


'tis mad and too much talk affords " .. 


... 1106 


And in my hearing be you mute 




and dumb " .. 


... 1123 


And with deep groans " .. 


... 1132 


And whiles against a thorn " .. 


.. 1135 


fall and die " .. 


.. 1139 


'Andfor, poor bird, thou sing'st not " .. 


.. 1142 


and then we will unfold " .. 


.. 1146 


and death reproach 's debtor " .. 


... 1155 


and be nurse to none " .. 


.. 1162 


for heaven and CoUatine " .. 


.. 1166 


and his sap decay " .. 


.. 1168 


And as his due " .. 


... 1183 


And, for my sake " .. 


.. 1197 


My soul and body to the skies and 




ground " .. 


.. 1199 


And all my fame " .. 


.. 1203 


live and think no shame " .. 


.. 1204 


both die and both shall victors be "' .. 


.. 1211 


And wiped the brinish pearl " .. 


.. 1213 


And sorts a sad look " .. 


.. 1221 


And then they drown " .. 


.. 1239 


And therefore are they form'd " .. 


.. 1241 


and shame that might ensue " .. 


.. 1263 


And who cannot " .. 


.. 1267 


and there she stay'd " .. 


.. 1275 


And ere I rose " .. 


.. 1281 


And that deep torture " .. 


.. 1287 


paper, ink, and pen " .. 


.. 1289 


ready by and by to bear " .. 


.. 1292 


and it will soon be writ " .. 


.. 1295 


and she prepares to write " .. 


.. 1296 


Conceit and grief '' .. 


.. 1298J 


this blunt and ill " .. 


.. 1300 


come and visit me " „ 


.. 1307 



AND 



17 



AND 



And— the life .... feeling R L 1.317 

When sighs and groans and tears " 1319 

And sorrow ebbs " 1330 

and on it writ " 1331 

and she delivers it " 1383 

but dull and slow " 1336 

And blushing on her " 1339 

life and bold audacity " 1346 

And blushing with him " 1355 

And yet the duteous vassal " 1360 

to weep and groan " 1362 

And dying eyes " 1378 

and smeared all with dust " 1381 

And from the towers of Troy " 1382 

grace and majesty " 1387 

quick bearing and dexterity " 13S9 

And here and there " 1390 

quake and tremble " 1393 

In Ajax and I'lysses " 1.394 

blunt rage and rigour roll'd " 1398 

regard and smiling government " 1400 

Wagg'd U23 and down and from his 

lips " 1406 

all boll'n and red " 1417 

to pelt and swear " 1418 

And in their rage " 1419 

And from the walls " 1429 

And to their hope " 1433 

And from the strand " 1436 

and their ranks began " 14.39 

the galled shore, and than " 1440 

They join and shoot " 1442 

all distress and dolour " 1446 

and grim care's reign " 1451 

with chaps and wrinkles " 1452 

And shapes her sorrow " 1458 

And bitter words " 1460 

And therefore Lucrece " 1462 

and not a tongue " 1463 

And drop sweet balm " 1466 

And rail on Pyrrhus " 1467 

And with my tears " 1468 

And with my knife " 1469 

And here in Troy " 1476 

dame and daughter die " 1477 

And friend to friend " 1488 

And one man's lust " 1489 

and not with fire " 1491 

and colour'd sorrow " 1497 

and she their looks " 1498 

And who she finds forlorn " 1500 

To hide deceit and give " 1507 

a constant and confirmed devil " 1513 

And therein so ensconced " 1515 

craft and perjury " 1517 

And little stars " 1525 

And chid the painter " 1528 

And still on him she gazed, and 

gazing still " 1531 

And from her tongue " 1537 

And turn'd it thus " 1539 

so weary and so mild " 1542 

and yet not wise " 1550 

And in that cold " 1557 

and make them bold " 1559 

Thus ebbs and flows " 1569 

And time doth weary time " 1570 

and then she longs " 1571 

And both she thinks " 1572 



And— And they that watch R L 1575 

his lord and other company " 1584 

And round about " 1586 

look'd red and raw " 1.592 

And thus begins " 1598 

And tell thy grief " 1603 

Collatine and his consorted lords " 1609 

And now this pale swan " 1611 

And my laments " 1616 

and on that pillow lay " 1620 

And what wrong else " 1622 

And softly cried " 1628 

And entertain my love " 1629 

On thee and thine " 1630 

and then I'll slaughter thee " 1634 

And swear I found you " 1635 

and so did kill " 1636 

and thy perpetual infamy " 1638 

to start and cry " 1639 

And then against my heart " 1640 

And never be forgot " 1644 

Lucrece and her groom " 1645 

And far the weaker " 1647 

And when the judge is robb'd " 1652 

Immaculate and spotless " 1656 

head declined and voice damm'd up " 1661 

sad-set eyes and wretched arms " 1662 

and back the same grief " 1673 

And his untimely frenzy " 1675 

And for my sake " 1681 

And why not I * " 1708 

many accents and delays " 1719 

sick and short assays " 1720 

and through her wounds " 1728 

and all his lordly crew " 1731 

And from the purple fountain " 1734 

and, as it left the place " 1735 

And bubbling from her breast " 1737 

Bare and unpeopled " 1741 

pure and red remain'd " 1742 

And some look'd black, and that 

false Tarquin " 1743 

the mourning and congealed face " 1744 

And ever since " 1747 

And blood untainted " 1749 

and they none of ours " 1757 

dim and old " 1760 

And shiver'd all the beauty " 1763 

and last no longer " 1765 

And leave the faltering feeble souls " 1763 

live again and see " 1770 

and not thy father thee " 1771 

And bids Lucretius " 1773 

And then in key-cold Lucrece " 1774 

He falls, and bathes " 1775 

And counterfeits to die " 1776 

And live to be revenged " 1778 

it rains, and busy winds " 1790 

Then son and father " 1791 

And only must be wail'd " 1799 

too early and too late " 1801 

I owed her and 'tis mine " 1803 

' My daughter ' and ' my wife " 1804 

' my daughter ' and ' my wife " 1805 

in state and pride " 1809 

and uttering foolish things " 1813 

And arm'd his long-hid wits " 181G 

and help to bear thy part " 1830 

And by this chaste blood " 1836 



AND 



18 



AND 



And — And by chaste Lucrece R L 1839 

and by this bloody knife " 1840 

And kiss'd the fatal knife " 1843 

And to his protestation " 1844 

And that deep vow _ " 1847 

and that they swore " 1848 

And so to publish " 1852 

And only herald to the gaudy Son 1 10 
and tender churl, makest waste " 1 12 
by the grave and thee " 1 14 

and dig deep trenches "22 

Shame aud thriftless praise . "28 

and make my old excuse " 2 11 

and see thy blood warm " 2 14 

Look in thy glass and tell the face "31 
thy mother's glass and she in thee "39 
Die single, and thine image dies " 3 14 
And being frank, she lends "44 

And that unfair which fairly "54 

hideous winter and confounds him "56 
frost and lusty leaves "57 

Beauty o'ersnow'd and bareness "58 
death's conquest and make worms " 6 14 
And having climb'd the steep-up "75 
low tract, and look another way " 7 12 
sire and child and happy mother " 8 11 
will be widow and still weep "95 

And kept unused, the user " 9 12 

presence is gracious and kind " 10 11 

And that fresh blood " 11 3 

wisdom, beaut j% and increase " 11 5 

folly, age, and cold decay " 11 6 

And threescore year would make " 11 8 
Harsh, featureless, and rude " 11 10 

for her seal, and meant thereby " 11 13 
And see the brave day " 12 2 

And sable curls all silver'd o'er " 12 4 
And summer's green all girded up " 12 7 
White and bristly beard " 12 8 

Since sweets and beauties do " 12 11 

And die as fast as they see " 12 12 

And nothing 'gainst time's scythe " 12 13 
And your sweet semblance " 13 4 

And barren rage of death's eternal " 13 12 
And yet raethiuks I have " 14 2 

his thunder, rain, and wind " 14 6 

And, constant stars, in them I read " 14 10 
As truth and beauty shall together 

thrive " 14 11 

truth's and beauty's doom and date " 14 14 
Cheered and check'd even by " 15 6 

And wear their brave state " 15 8 

And all in war with Time " 15 13 

And fortify yourself in your decay " 16 3 
And many maiden gardens " 16 6 

And you must live, drawn " 16 14 

Which hides your life and shows not " 17 4 
And in fresh numbers " 17 6 

And your true rights " 17 11 

And stretched metre " 17 12 

live twice, in it and in my rhyme " 17 14 
lovely and more temperate " 18 2 

And summer's lease hath all " 18 4 

And often is his gold complexion " 18 6 
And every fair from fair " 18 7 

So long lives this, and this gives life " 18 14 
And make the earth devour " 19 2 

And burn the long-lived pbcenix " 19 4 
Make glad and sorry seasons " 19 5 



And — And do whatever thou wilt Son 

world and all her fading sweets " 

men's eyes and women's souls " 
And for a woman wert thou first 

created " 

And by addition me of thee defeated " 

love, and thy love's use " 

And every fair with his fair " 
with sun and moon, with earth and 

seas " 

flowers, and all things rare " 

And then believe me " 

youth and thou are of one date " 

And in mine own " 

And dumb presages " 

love, and look for recompense " 

play'd the painter and hath stell'd " 
And perspective it is best painters' 

art " 

drawn thy shape and thine for me " 

honour and proud titles " 

And in themselves " 

And all the rest forgot " 

love and am beloved " 

And puts apparel " 

And keep my drooping eye-lids " 

beauteous and her old face new " 

For thee and for myself " 

But day by night, and night by day " 

And each, though enemies " 

And dost him grace " 

And night doth nightly make " 

fortune and men's eyes " 

And trouble deaf heaven " 

And look upon myself and curse " 

this man's art and that man's scope " 

thee, and then my state " 

And with old woes new wail " 

And weep afresh " 

And moan the expense " 

And heavily from woe to woe " 

restored and sorrows end " 

And there reigns love and all love's " 

And all those friends " 

holy and obsequious " 

And thou, all they " 

And shalt by fortune " 

And though they be outstripp'd " 

died, and poets better prove " 

And from the forlorn world " 

And make me travel " 

wound and cures not " 

And they are rich and ransom all " 

thorns, and silver fountains mud " 
Clouds and eclipses stain both moon 

and sun " 

And loathsome canker " 

faults, and even I " 

And 'gainst myself " 

my love and hate " 

worth and truth " 

And by a part " 

And he that calls on thee " 

And what is 't but mine own " 

And our dear love " 

Which time and thoughts so sweetly " 

And that thou teachest " 

And yet, love knows " 

Thy beauty and thy years • " 



19 


6 


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7 


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8 


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14 


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3 . 


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7 


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14 


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3 



AND 



19 



AND 



And — Gentle thou art, .... therefore Son 
And when a woman woos " 

And chide thy beauty and thy 

straying youth " 

And yet it m^y be " 

And for my sake " 

And losing her " 

Both find each other, and I lose both " 
And both for. my sake " 

my friend and I are one " 

And, darkly bright " 

And night's bright days " 

both sea and land " 

earth and water wrought " 

slight air and purging fire " 

again, and straight grow sad " 

Mine eye and heart " 

And says in him " 

And by their verdict " 

moiety and the dear heart's part " 
And my heart's right " 

Betwixt eye and heart " 

' And each doth good turns " 

And to the painted banquet . " 

And in his thoughts " 

And I am still with them and they 

with me " 

heart's and eye's delight " 

dearest and mine only care " 

may'st come and part " 

And even thence " 

And scarcely greet me " 

And this my hand " 

that ease and that repose " 

lies onward, and my joy behind " 
run and give him leave " 

feasts solemn and so rare " 

Andyou, but one, can every shadow " 
Adonis, and the counterfeit " 

And you in Grecian tires " 

spring and foison of the year " 

And you in every blessed shape " 
thorns, and play as wantonly " 

unwoo'd and unrespected fade " 

And so of you, beauteous and lovely 

youth " 

And broils root out " 

death and all-oblivious enmity " 
You live in this and dwell " 

see again, and do not kill " 

the hours and times " 

stay and think of nought " 

And patience, tame to sufferance " 
And Time that gave doth now " 

And delves the parallels " 

And nothing stands but for his 

scythe " 

And yet to times in hope my verse " 
shames and idle hours " 

scope and ten our " 

And all my soul and all my every " 
And for this sin " 

And for myself mine own worth " 
Beated and chopp'd " 

hand crush'd and o'erworn " 

drain'd his blood and fiU'd his brow " 
With lines and wrinkles " 

And all those beauties " 

And they shall live, and he in them " 



41 


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2 


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7 


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11 


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1 


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14 


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7 


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6 


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3 


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14 


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4 


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9 


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14 



And — And brass, eternal slave Son 
And the firm soil " 
loss and loss with store " 
come and take my love away " 
And needy nothing trimui'd " 
And purest faith unhappily for- 
sworn " 
And gilded honour shamefully 

misplaced " 
And maiden virtue rudely strum- 

peted " 
And right perfection wrongfully 

disgraced " 
And strength by limping sway 

disabled " 

And art made tongue-tied " 
And folly, doctor-like, controlling 

skill " 

And simple truth miscall'd " 

And captive good attending " 

And with his presence " 

And lace itself " 

And steal dead seeing " 

And, proud of many " 

beauty lived and died " 

itself and true " 

And him as for a map " 

And that, in guess " 

And thou present'st " 

And mock you with me " 

And hang more praise " 

And live no more " 

And so should you " 

by and by black night " 

And that is this, and this with thee " 

And for the peace " 

miser and his wealth " 

enjoyer, and anon " 

And by and by " 

pine and surfeit " 

methods and to compounds strange " 

And keep invention " 

birth and where they did proceed " 

And you and love " 

daily new and old " 

And of this book " 

blanks, and thou shalt find " 

thee and much enrich thy book " 

And found such fair " 

And under thee " 

And heavy ignorance " 

And given grace " 

thine and born of thee " 

And arts with thy sweet graces " 

art, and dost advance " 

And my sick Muse " 

He robs thee of, and pays it thee " 

and he stole that word " 

And found it in thy cheek " 

And in the praise " 

building and of goodly pride " 

thrive and I be cast away " 

And tongues to be " 

And therefore may'st " 

And therefore art " 

And do so, love " 

And their gross painting " 

And therefore to your fair " 

And therefore have I slept " 



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S3 


2 


S3 






AND 



20 



AND 



And — give life .... bring a tomb Son 

And such a counterpart " 

And precious phrase " 

And, like unletter'd clerk " 

And to the most of praise " 

And like enough " 

And for that riches " 

And so my patent back again " 

And place my merit " 

And prove thee virtuous " 

And I by this will be a gainer too " 

And I will comment " 

lameness, and I straight will halt " 

strangle and look strange " 

and in my tongue " 
And haply of our old acquaintance " 

And do not drop in for an after-loss " 

And other strains of woe " 

hawks and hounds " 

And every humour " 

And having thee " 
away and me most wretched make " 

And life no longer " 

false and yet I know it not " 
Is writ in moods and frowns and 

wrinkles strange " 

hurt and will do none " 

cold and to temptation slow " 

And husband nature's riches " 

lords and owners " 

only live and die " 

sweet and lovely " 

And all things turn " 

youth and gentle sport " 
grace and faults are loved of more 

and less " 

translated and for true things " 

And yet this time " 

orphans and unfather'd fruit " 

for summer and his pleasure " 
And, thou away, the very birds are " 

laugh'd and leap'd with him " 

in odour and in hue " 

winter still and you away " 

And buds of marjoram " 

And to his robbery " 

and straight redeem " 
And gives thy pen both skill and 

argument " 
And make Time's spoils " 
scythe and crooked knife " 
Both truth and beauty " 
and therein dignified " 
And to be praised " 
wasnew, and then but in the spring " 
And stops her pipe " 
And sweets grown common " 
and there appears a face " 
Dulling my lines and doing me dis- 
grace " 
your graces and your gifts " 
And more, much more " 
and no pace perceived " 
Hath motion, and mine eye " 
songs and praises be " 
still such and ever so " 
'Fair, kind, and true " 
' Fair, kind, and true " 
And in this change " 



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And— 'Fair, kind, ...true Son 

And beauty making beautiful " 

ladies dead and lovely knights " 

And, for they look'd " 

And the sad augurs " 

And peace proclaims olives " 

and Death to me subscribes " 

dull and speechless tribes " 

And thou in this shalt find " 

crests and tombs " 

dust and injury of age " 

time and outward form " 

gone here and there " 

And made myself " 

Askance and strangely " 

And worse essays " 
pure and most most loving breast " 

And almost thence " 

and wish I were renewed " 

friend, and I assure you " 

Your love and pity " 

and I must strive " 

my shames and praises " 

To critic and to flatterer " 

And that which governs " 

function and is partly blind " 

And that your love " 

monsters and things indigest " 
And my great mind most kingly " 

And to his palate " 

loves it and doth first begin " 

and change decrees of kings " 

tempests and is never shaken " 

rosy lips and cheeks " 

brief hours and weeks " 

bo error and upon me proved " 

And given to time " 

wilfulness and errors down " 

And on just proof " 

constancy and virtue " 

And sick of welfare " 

And brought to medicine " 

learn, and find the lesson " 

hopes and hopes to fears " 

And ruin'd love when it is built " 

And gain by ill " 

And for that sorrow " 

And I, a tyrant, have no leisure " 

And soon to you " 

and yours must ransom me " 

And the just pleasure " 

I am, and they that level " 

and in their badness reign " 

as brain and heart " 

and therefore we admire " 

And rather make them " 

Thy registers and thee " 

records and what we see " 

vow, and this shall ever be " 

thy scythe and thee " 

lose all, and more ". 

And take thou my oblation " 
waning grown and therein show'st " 
disgrace and wretched minutes kill " 
And her quietus is to render thee " 

And beauty slander'd " 

and they mourners seem " 
And situation with those dancing 

chips " 



105 


13 


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3 


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4 


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6 


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6 


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6 


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8 


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13 


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1 


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5 


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6 


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3 


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4 


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5 


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10 


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12 


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14 


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6 


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11 


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13 


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6 


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9 


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10 


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14 


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7 


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11 


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13 


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3 


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11 


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14 


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7 


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11 


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14 


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3 


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9 


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14 


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5 


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7 


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9 


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11 


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6 


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10 


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8 


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12 


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4 


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10 


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10 



AND 



21 



AND 



Aiul — . . . . till action, lust Son 

and no sooner had " 

pursuit, and in possession so " 

having and in quest to have " 

in proof, and proved " 

red and white " 

And in some perfumes " 

And yet by heaven " 

fairest and most precious " 

And to be sure " 

And thence this slander " 

I love, and they, as pitying me " 

on black and loving mourners " 

And truly not " 

And suit thy pity " 

And all they foul " 

my friend and me " 

And my next self " 

' myself and thee " 

And yet thou wilt " 

and all that is in me " 

And I myself " 

covetous and he is kind " 

And sue a friend " 

both him and me " 

and yet am I not free " 
And 'Will' to boot and 'Will' in 

overplus " 

large and spacious " 

And in my will " 

And in abundance " 

and me in that one ' Will " 

And will, thy soul knows " 

and my will one " 

and love that still " 

And then thou lovest me " 

behold, and see not " 

my heart and eyes have err'd " 

And to this false plague " 

And wherefore say not I '' 

And age in love " 

I lie with her and she with me " 

And in our faults " 

and slay me not by art " 

And therefore from - " 

and rid my pain " 

words and words express " 

And in my madness " 

slave and vassal wretch to be " 

and thy dear virtue hate " 

And thou shalt find " 

And seal'd false bonds " 

sets down her babe and makes " 

And play the mother's part " 
turn back and my loud crying still " 

of comfort and despair " 

And would corrupt my saint " 

And whether that my angel " 

And taught it thus " 

And saved my life " 

pine within and suffer dearth " 

And let that pine " 

And Death once dead " 

and I desperate now approve " 
And frantic-mad with ever-more 

unrest " 

thoughts and my discourse " 

and thought thee bright " 

with watching and with tears " 



129 


2 


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H 


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4 


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11 


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3 


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10 


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12 


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1 


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4 


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7 


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3 


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12 


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14 


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1 


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7 


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9 


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8 


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14 


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3 


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10 


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14 


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7 


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10 


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11 


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13 


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10 



And — I am blind Son 149 14 

And swear that brightness " IfiO 4 

strength and warrantise of skill " 150 7 

hear and see just cause " 150 10 

for whose dear love I rise and fall " 151 14 

and new faith torn " 152 3 

And all my honest faith " 152 8 

And, to enlighten thee " 152 11 

laid by his brand and fell asleep " 153 1 

And his love-kindling fire " 153 3 

And grew a seething bath " 153 7 

And thither hied " 153 12 

And so the general of hot desire " 154 7 

a bath and healthful remedy " 154 11 

cure, and this by that I prove " 154 13 

And down I laid L C 4 

sorrow's wind and rain " 7 

beauty spent and done " 1] 

And often reading " 19 

both high and low " 21 

and nowhere fix'd " 27 

The mind and sight distractedly " 28 

pale and pined cheek beside " 32 

And, true to bondage " 34 

crystal, and of beaded jet " 37 

tore, and gave the flood " 44 

of posied gold and bone " 45 

silk feat and affectedly " 48 

and seal'd to curious secresy " 49 

and often kiss'd, and often 'gan to 

tear " 51 

more black and damned here " 54 

and had let go by " 59 

And, privileged by age " 62 

grounds and motives of her woe " 63 

And comely-distant sits he " 65 

and to no love beside " 77 

and made him her place " 82 

And when in his fair parts " 83 

lodged and newly deified " 84 

And every light occasion " 86 

And nice affections " 97 

maiden-tongued he was and there- 
of free " 100 

May and April is to see " 102 

and often men would say " 106 

And controversy hence " 110 

gave life and grace " 114 

To appertainings and to ornament " 115 

arguments and question deep " 121 

prompt and reason strong " 122 

did wake and sleep " 123 

dialect and different skill " 125 

and sexes both enchanted " 128 

And dialogued for him " 132 

and made their wills obey " 133 

and in it put their mind '■' 135 

Of lands and mansions " 138 

And labouring in nioe pleasures " 139 

•And was my own fee-simple " 144 

art in youth and youth in art " 145 

and gave him all my flower " 147 

and his amorous spoil " 154 

Though Reason weep, and cry " 168 

And knew the patterns " 170 

and words merely but art " 174 

And bastards of his foul adulterate " 175 

And long upon these terms " 176 

And be not of my holy vows " 179 



AND 



22 



AND 



And — And so much less of shame L C 188 

And reign'd, commanding " 196 

and rubies red as blood " 198 

Of grief and blushes " 200 

and the encrimson'd mood " 201 

terror and dear modesty " 202 

And, lo, behold these talents " 204 

And deep-brain'd sonnets " 209 

•worth and quality " 210 

'twas beautiful and hard " 211 

sapphire and the opal blend " 215 

Of pensived and subdued desires " 219 

my origin and ender " 222 

and to your audit comes " 230 

and did thence remove " 237 

And makes her absence " 245 

And now she would " 249 

And now, to tempt all " 252 

And mine I pour " 256 

o'er them, and you o'er me " 257 

vows and consecrations " 263 

thou art all, and all things " 266 

And sweetens, in the suffering pangs" 272 

forces, shocks, and fears " 273 

And supplicant their sighs " 276 

And credent soul to that strong- 
bonded oath " 279 

prefer and undertake my troth " 280 

and chill extiucture hath " 294 

sober guards and civil fears " 298 

and mine did him restore " 301 

and he takes and leaves " 305 

and swound at tragic shows " 308 

is both kind and tame " 311 

And, veil'd in them " 312 

and praised cold chastity " 315 

naked and concealed fiend " 317 

Who, young and simple " 320 

I fell and yet do question make " 322 

And new pervert a reconciled maid " 329 

And wherefore say not I PP 1 10 

And age, in love " 1 12 
I'll lie with love and love with me " 1 13 

of comfort and despair "21 

And would corrupt my saint "27 

And whether that my angel "29 

and breath a vapour is "39 

lovely, fresh, and green "42 

she touch'd him here and there "47 

But smile and jest • " 4 12 

fair queen, and toward " 4 13 

He rose and ran away " 4 14 

bias leaves, and makes his book "55 

is music and sweet fire " 5 12 

And scarce the herd "62 

and throws his mantle by "69 

And stood stark naked " 6 10 
Brighter than glass and yet as glass "73 

Softer than wax, and yet as iron "74 

her tears, and all were jestings " 7 12 

and yet she foil'd the framing " 7 15 

and yet she fell a-turniug " 7 16 

If music and sweet poetry agree "81 

the sister and the brother "82 

'twixt thee and me "83 

the one and I the other "84 

And I in deep delight " 8 11 

and both in thee remain " 8 14 

a youngster proud and wild "94 



And — with horn hounds P P 9 6 

And blushing fled and left her " 9 14 

and vaded in the spring " 10 2 

And falls through wind " 10 6 

and yet no cause I have " 10 7 

And yet thou left'st me more " 10 9 

And as he fell to her " 11 4 

And then she clipp'd Adonis " 11 6 

And with her lips on his " 11 10 

And as she fetched breath " 11 11 

And would not take her meaning " 11 12 

To kiss and clip me " 11 14 

Crabbed age and youth " 12 1 
Youth is hot and bold, age is weak 

and cold " 12 7 

Youth is wild and age is tame " 12 8 

a vain and doubtful good " 13 1 

And as goods lost " 13 7 

painting, pain, and cost " 13 12 

And daff'd me to a cabin " 14 3 

and come again to-morrow " 14 5 

sits and sings I sit and mark " 15 5 

And wish her lays " 15 6 
And drives away dark dreaming 

night " 15 8 

and eyes their wished sight " 15 10 

and solace mix'd with sorrow " 15 11 

and bade me come to-morrow " 15 12 

and length thyself to-morrow " 15 IS 

And deny himself for Jove " 17 17 

And stall'd the deer " 19 2 

And when thou comest " 19 7 

And set thy person forth to sell " 19 12 

And then too late she will repent " 19 15 

And twice desire, ere it be day " 19 17 
And ban and brawl, and say thee 

nay " 19 20 

And to her will frame all thy ways " 19 25 

Spare not to spend and chiefly there " 19 26 

castle, tower, and town " 19 29 

And in thy suit be humble true " 19 32 

wiles and guiles that women " 19 37 

The tricks and toys that in them " 19 39 

To sin and never for to saint " 19 44 

Live with me and be my love " 20 1 

And we will all the pleasures prove " 20 2 

hills and valleys, dales and fields " 20 3 

And all the craggy mountains yields " 20 4 

And see the shepherds feed " 20 6 

A cap of flowers, and a kirtle " 20 11 

A belt of straw and ivy buds " 20 13 

With coral clasps and amber studs " 20 14 

And if these pleasures " 20 15 

Then live with me and be my love " 20 16 

the world and love were young " 20 17 

And truth in every shepherd's " 20 18 

To live with thee and be thy love " 20 20 

Beasts did leap and birds did sing " 21 5 

Trees did grow and plants did spring " 21 6 

And there sung the dolefull'st ditty " 21 11 

•Tereu, Tereu!' by and by " 21 14 

Thou and I were both beguiled " 21 30 

And with such-like flattery " 21 41 

Herald sad and trumpet be P T 3 

And thou treble-dated crow " 17 

breath thou givest and takest " 19 

Love and constancy is dead " 22 

Phcenix and the turtle fled " 23 

Distance, and no space was seen " 30 



AND 



23 



ANY 



And— 

'Twixt the turtle his queen P T 31 

To the phoenix and the dove " 50 

Co-supremes and stars of love " 51 

Beauty, truth, and rarity " 53 

And the turtle's loyal breast " 57 

Truth and beauty buried be " 64 

Anew— she doth .... begin VA 60 

enforced to seek anew Son 82 7 

•when it is built anew "119 11 

And taught it thus anew to greet " 145 8 

Press never thou to choose anew P P 19 34 

Angel — The better is a man right 

fair Son 144 3 

my better angel from my side " 144 6 

my angel be turn'd fiend " 144 9 

one angel in another's liell " 144 12 

my bad angel fire my good one out " 144 14 

My better angel is a man right fair P P 2 3 

my better angel from my side "26 

my angel be turn'd fiend " . ^ 9 

one angel in another's hell " 2 12 

my bad angel fire my good one out " 2 14 

Anger — and .... ashy-pale V A 76 

for anger makes the lily pale R L 478 

anger thrusts into liis hide Son 50 10 

Which, not to anger bent P P 5 12 

Angrj- — beauty in his eyes VA 70 

his rider's angry stir " .283 

hides his angry brow " 339 

Who, therefore angry, seems P i 388 

angry that the eyes fly from their " 461 

would debate with angry swords " 1421 

scratch out the angry eyes " 1469 

Angry that his prescriptions Son 147 6 

Angry-chafing — 

The picture of an .... boar VA 662 

Annexation — 

annexations of fair gems L C 208 

Annexed — But ill-annexed Opportu- 
nity P L 874 

had annex'd thy breath Son 99 11 

Annoy — life was death's ... . VA 497 

Tantalus' is her annoy " 599 

For mirth doth search the bottom 

of annoy P L 1109 

cloud-kissing Ilion with annoy " 1370 

■receivestwith pleasure thine annoy &)7i 8 4 

Anon — . ... he rears upright VA 279 

Anon he starts at stirring " 302 

Anon their loud alarums " 700 

Anon she hears them " 869 

Anon his beating heart P L 433 

Anon permit the basest clouds Son 33 5 

Now proud as an snjoyer, and anon " 75 5 

anon their gazes lend L C 26 

Anon he comes P P 6 9 

Anon Adonis comes "96 

Another — his lips .... way VA 90 

As if another chase " 696 

And there another " 915 

another sadly scowling " 917 

Another flap-mouth'd mourner " 920 

Another and another answer " 922 

Puffs forth another wind P L 315 

thy present trespass in another " 632 

The branches of anotlier root " 828 

another straight ensues " 1104 

leau'd on another's head " 1415 



Another — 

Another smother'd seems to pelt PL 1418 

to speak another word " 1642 

Another power; no flood by raining " 1677 

that face should form another Son 3 2 
to breed another tliee "67 

and look another way " 7 12 

sweet husband to another "89 

Make thee another self " 10 13 

Another time mine eye " 47 7 

Ere beauty's dead fleece made an- 
other gay " 68 8 
no summer of another's green " 68 11 
doth give another place " 79 4 
another white despair . " 99 9 
gave my heart another youth "110 7 
One on another's neck " 131 11 
one angel in another's hell " 144 12 
one angel in another's hell PP 2 12 
One woman would another wed " 19 48 

Answer — she answers him, as if VA 308 

echoes answer so " 840 

they answer all "Tis so " 851 

Another and another answer " 922 

Tarquin answers with surmise P L 83 

to answer her but cries " 1459 

to answer his desire " 1606 

If thou could'st answer Son 2 10 

he answers with a groan " 50 11 

answer not thy show " 93 14 

Answer — that stops his .... so PL 1664 

Make answer, Muse Son 101 5 

Ansiver'd — Answer'd their cries PL 1806 

though delay'd answer'd must be Son 126 11 

Answering — 
tapsters every call VA 849 

Anthem — Her heavy .... " 839 

Here the anthem doth commence P T 21 

Antic — Quick-shifting antics P L 459 

Anticipate — in love, to ... . Son 118 9 

Antique — metre of an . . .. song " 17 12 

with thine antique pen " 19 10 

in some antique book " 59 7 

those holy antique hours " 69 9 

I see their antique pen " 106 7 

Antiquity — To spoil antiquities P L 951 

Beated and chopp'd with tann'd 

antiquity Son 62 10 

Makes antiquity for aye his page " 108 12 

Any — snow takes .... dint VA 354 

be any jot diminish'd " 417 

if any love you owe me " 523 

never relieved by any " 708 

or any thing ensuing " 1078 

As shaming any eye P L 1143 

May any terms acquit me " 1706 

deny that thou bear'st love to any Son 10 1 
As any mother's child " 21 11 

Or any of these all " 37 6 

lock'd up in any chest " 48 9 

Though you do any thing " 57 14 

I was not sick of any fear from 

thence " 86 12 
make me any summer's story tell " 98 7 
If time have any wrinkle graven " 100 10 
If any, be a satire to decay " 100 11 
As any she belied wiih false compare " 130 14 
To any sensual feast " 141 8 
Or any of my leisures L C 193 



APACE 



24 



ARE 



Apace — 

th rough the dark laund runs. ... VA 813 

downward flow'd apace Z, C 284 

Appaid — thou art well .... ML 914 

Appal — Appals her senses VA 882 

Appalled — Property was thus .... P T 37 

Apparel — And puts .... on my tat- 
tered loving Son 26 11 

Apparition — At apparitions, signs VA 926 

Appeal — Since my says Son 117 13 

But with a pure appeal JR L 293 

my heaved-up hands appeal " 638 

Appear — in each cheek appears VA 242 

and in the breach appears " 1175 

in his fair welkin once appear R L 116 

yet winking there appears " 458 

faults do seldom to themselves ap- 
pear " _... 633 

of Troy there would appear " 1382 

their light joy seem'd to appear " _... 1434 
As interest of the dead which now 

appear Son 31 7 

your bounty doth appear " 53 11 

doth wilfully appear " 80 8 

though less the show appear " 102 2 

and there appears a face " 103 6 

began but to appear L C 93 

Appear to him as he to me appears " 299 

Appearance — in him thy fair .... 

lies Son 46 8 

Appearing — homage to his new-ap- 
pearing sight "73 

Appertaining — To appertainings and 

to ornament LC 115 

Appetite— With leaden .... VA 34 

edge on his keen appetite It L 9 

Nor aught obeys but his foul appe- 
tite " 546 

Thy edge should blunter be than 

appetite Son 56 2 

Mine appetite I never more " 110 10 

to make our appetites more keen " 118 1 

sickly appetite to please " 147 4 

appetite from judgement L C 166 

Apple — How like Eve's Son 93 13 

Applied — being so B L 531 

there may be aught applied L C 68 

if I had self-applied " 76 

Applied to cautels '■' 303 

Applying — Applying this to that VA 713 

Applying fears to hopes Son 119 3 

applying wet to wet i C 40 

Approach — Welcomes the warm. ... VA 386 

For his approach that often there P P 68 

Approve — for my sake to her Son 42 8 

slander doth but approve " 70 5 

1 desperate now approve " 147 7 

Apology — Apologies be made H L 31 

April — Show'd like an .... daisy " 395 

calls back the lovely April of her 

prime Son 3 10 

With April's first-born flowers " 21 7 

When proud-pied April dress'd in " 98 2 

Three April perfumes " 104 7 

'twixt May and April is to see L C 102 

Apt — As .... as new-fall'n snow V A 354 

Youth so apt to pluck P P 17 14 

Aptly— the story ends VA 716 

to do will aptly find L C 88 



Aptly — blushes, .... understood L C . 

Aptness — In either's " , 

Arabian — the sole tree P T . 

Arbitrator — Unprofitable sounds, 
weak arbitrators P L . 

Arch — As through an .... 

Ardca — From the besieged .... 
At Ardea to my lord 

Are — doves or roses .... V A 

yet are they red 
there are but twain 
flowers that are not gather'd 
Mine eyes are grey 
Torches are made to light 
are growth's abuse 
Her words are done 
proud, as feonales are 
beams upon his hairless face are 

fix'd 
Are they not quickly 
sheep are gone to fold 
Her lips are conquerors 
Things out of hope are compass'd oft ' 
Are better proof ' 

Are like a labyrinth 
hounds are driven to doubt 
Are on the sudden 
night-wanderers often are 
hours are long 
^nd are never done 
hounds are at a bay 
that they are afraid 
poor people are amazed 
are both of them extremes 
her eyes are fled 
Her eyes are mad 
My sighs are blown away 
Mine eyes are turn'd to fire 
The flowers are sweet 
and they are pale 
Are weakly fortress'd R L 

Those that much covet are with 

gain so fond " 

The things we are for that which " 
pure thoughts are dead and still " 
All orators are dumb " 

Our mistress' ornaments are chaste " 
Thoughts are but dreams " 

But blind they are *' 

Are by his flaming torch " 

Such shadows are the weak brain's " 
Are nature's faults " 

in a wilderness where are no laws " 
pity-pleading eyes are sadly fix'd " 
monarehs still are feared for love " 
For princes are the glass " 

0, how are they wrapp'd " 

Small lights are soon blown out " 
light and lust are deadly enemies " 
faults which in thy reign are made " 
branches of another root are rotted " 
all that are to come " 

and murder'st all that are " 

grooms are sightless night " 

Gnats are unnoted " 

eyes that are sleeping " 

Sad souls are slain " 

Their gentle sex to weep are often 
■willing " 



200 

306 

2 

1017 

1667 

1 

1332 

10 

116 

123 

131 

140 

163 

166 

254 

309 

487 

520 

532 

549 

567 

626 

684 

692 

749 

825 

, 842 

, 846 

, 877 

, 898 

925 

, 987 

. 1037 

, 1062 

. 1071 

. 1072 

, 1079 

. 1123 

. 28 

. 134 
. 149 
. 167 
. 268 
. 322 
. 353 
. 378 
. 448 
. 460 
. 539 
. 544 
. 561 
. 611 
. 615 
. 636 
. 647 
. 674 
. 804 
. 823 
. 923 
. 929 
. 1013 
. 1014 
. 1090 
, 1110 

. 1237 



ARE 



25 



ARM 



Are— And therefore.... they fortn'd RL 1241 

Poor women's faces are their own 

faults' books " 1253 

that they are so fiilfill'd " 1258 

that down thy cheeks are raining " 1271 

My woes are tedious, though my 

words are brief " 1309 

Greeks that are thine enemies " 1470 

Are balls of quenchless fire " 1554 

words are now depending " 1615 

We are their offspring " 1757 

As sillyjeering idiots are with kings " ..... 1812 
she lends to those are free Son 4 4 
The eyes, 'fore-duteous, now con- 
verted are " 7 11 
were yourself ! but, love, you are " 13 1 
youth and thou are of one date " 22 2 
Are windows to my breast " 24 11 
Let those who are in favour " 2o 1 
All losses are restored " .30 14 
Ah, but those tears are pearl " 34 13 
And they are rich and ransom " 34 14 
Excusing thy sins more than thy 

sins are " 35 8 

our undivided loves are one " 36 2 

my friend and I are one " 42 13 

darkly bright, are bright in dark " 43 4 

All days are nights to see till I see " 43 13 

Are both with thee " 45 2 
For when these quicker elements 

are gone " 45 6 
Mine eye and heart are at a mortal 

war " 46 1 

my jewels trifles are " 48 5 

Thus far the miles are measured " 50 4 

Therefore are feasts so solemn and " 52 5 
Like stones of worth they thinly 

placed are " 52 7 

Blessed are you, whose worthiness " 52 13 

whereof are you made . " 53 1 
And you in Grecian tires are 

painted new " 53 8 
Of their sweet deaths are sweetest 

odours made " 54 12 

where you are how happy you " 57 12 

how are our brains beguiled " 59 2 

Whether we are mended " 59 11 

Are vanishing or vanish'd " 63 7 
When rocks impregnable are not 

so stout " 65 7 
those holy antique hours are seen " 68 9 
So are you to my thoughts " 75 1 
sweet-season'd showers are to the " 75 2 
And you and love are still my ar- 
gument " 76 10 
my gracious numbers are decayed " 79 3 
breathers of this world are dead " 81 12 
praise that you alone are you " 84 2 
That you are you " 84 8 
My bonds in thee are all " 87 4 
these particulars are not my " 91 7 
Who, moving others, are themselves 

as stone " 94 3 

They are the lords and owners " 94 7 

Both grace and faults are loved " 96 3 
So are those errors that in thee are 

seen " 96 7 

the very birds are mute " 97 12 

I saw you fresh which yet are green " 104 8 



Are — praises .... but prophecies Son 106 9 

crests and tombs of brass are spent " 107 14 

You are my all the world " 112 5 

To critic and to flatterer stopped are " 112 11 

You are so strongly in my purpose " 112 13 
That all the world beside methinks 

are dead " 112 14 
Or on my frailties why are frailer 

spies " 121 7 

All men are bad " 121 14 

Thy gift, thy tables are within " 122 1 

To me are nothing novel "123 3 

They are but dressings " 123 4 

Our dates are brief " 123 5 

my mistress' eyes are raven black " 127 9 

saucy jacks so happy are in this " 128 13 
my mistress' eyes are nothing like 

the sun " 130 1 

her breasts are dun " 130 3 

are they now transferred " 137 14 

my days are past the best " 138 6 

Nor are mine ears " 141 5 

prescriptions are not kept " 147 6 

and my discourse as madmen's are " 147 11 

my vows are oaths " 152 7 

their poor balls are tied LC 24 

Are errors of the blood " 184 

How mighty then you are " 253 

all things else are thine " 266 

what are precepts worth *' 267 

Love's arms are peace " 271 

goods lost are seld or never found P P 13 7 

now are minutes added " 15 14 

All my merry jigs are quite forgot " 18 9 

friends are lapp'd in lead " 21 24 

Words are easy, like the wind " 21 33 

Faithful friends are hard to find " 21 34 

These are certain signs to know " 21 57 

That are either true or fair P T 65 

Aright — what they see Son 148 4 

Arise— What following sorrow may 

on this arise R L 186 

quoth he, ' arise " 1818 

so, till the judgement that yourself 

arise Son 55 13 
Ariseth— 

The sun in his majesty VA 856 

Arising— at break of day .... Son 29 11 

Argued — Argued by beauty's red R L 65 

Argument— I force not a straw " 1021 

Thine own sweet argument Son 38 3 
And you and love are still my ar- 
gument " 76 10 
I grant, sweet love, thy lovely ar- 
gument " 79 5 
both skill and argument " 100 8 
The argument, all' bare, is of more 

worth " 103 3 

is all my argument " 105 9 

All kind of arguments L C 121 

could not hold argument P P Z 2 

Arm — Over one the lusty VA 31 

fasten'd in her arms " 68 

my arms his field " 108 

her arms infold him " 225 

in her arms be bound " 226 

twining arms doth urge " 256 

Her arms do lend " 539 

yoking arms she throws " 592 



ARM 



26 



AS 



Arm — those fair arms -which bound VA 812 

Honour and beauty in the owner's 

arms -B £ 27 

With bruised arms and wreaths " 110 

Throwing his mantle rudely o'er 

his arm " 170 

knighthood and to shining arms " 197 

And in thy dead arms " 517 

To cross their arms " 793 

and wretched arms across " 1662 

with revengeful arms " 1693 

By our strong arms " 1834 

Love's arms are peace L C 271 

clipp'd Adonis in her arms P P 11 6 

with arms contending " 16 13 

Armed — with hairy bristles .... VA 625 

stands armed in mine ear " 779 

Griped in an armed hand It L 1425 

To me came Tarquin armed " 1544 

And arm'd his long-hid wits " 1816 

Armour— His naked ... . " 188 

Army — To those two armies " 76 

Array — in his fresh .... V A 483 

these rebel powers that thee array Son 146 2 
Arrest — Hath served a dumb .... 

upon his tongue RL 1780 

when that fell arrest Son 74 1 
Arrive — Ere he ... . his weary noon- 
tide prick R L 781 

Arrived — this false lord .... " 50 

Arrow — Love's golden VA 947 

Art — His .... with nature's " 291 

In scorn of nature art gave lifeless 

life R L 1374 

In Ajax and L^ysses, 0, what art " 1394 

And, constant stars, in them I read 

such art Son 14 10 

it is best painter's art " 24 4 
Yet eyes this cunning want to grace 

their art " 24 13 

Desiring this man's art " 29 7 
On Helen's cheek all art of beauty 

set " 53 7 

And art made tongue-tied by " 66 9 

To show false Art " 68 14 
And arts with thy sweet graces 

graced be " 78 12 
Which is not mix'd with seconds 

knows no art " 125 11 

with art's false-borrow'd face " 127 6 

slay me not by art " 139 4 
What with his art in youth, and 

youth in art L C 145 

Thought, characters, and words 

merely but art " 174 

but an art of craft " 295 

those pleasures live that art can 

comprehend P P .5 6 

Thus art with arms contending " 16 13 

Art — why art thou coy V A 96 

Art thou ashamed " 121 

thou art bound to breed " 171 

thou thyself art dead " 172 

Art thou obdurate " 199 

Art thou a woman's son " 201 

Thou art no man . " 215 

thyself art made away " 763 

thou art so full " 1021 

Since thou art dead " 1135 



Art— Thou the next VA 1184 

Thyself art mighty R L 583 

harder than a stone thou art " 593 

Thou art not what thou seem'st " 600 

Thou seem'st not what thou art " 601 

when once thou art a king " 603 

' Thou art,' quoth she, ' a sea " 652 

Since thou art guilty " 772 

and thou art well appaid " 914 

Guilty thou art of murder " 918 

thou art doting father " 1064 

Priam, why art thou old " 1550 

Why art thou thus attired " 1601 

Thou that art now the world's Son 1 9 

when thou art old " 2 13 

Thou art thy mother's glass "39 

happier than thou art " "69 

for thou art much too fair " 6 13 

Who for thyself art so unprovident " 10 2 

thou art beloved of many " 10 3 

thou art so possess'd " 10 5 

Thou art more lovely '.' 18 2 

elder than thou art " 22 8 

thou art bright " 28 9 

Thou art the grave " 31 9 

When thou art all the better part " 39 2 

temptation follows where thou art " 41 4 

Gentle thou art " 41 5 

Beauteous thou art " 41 6 

Where thou art forced to break " 41 12 

when thou art gone " 44 10 

Thyself away art present still " 47 10 

Art left the prey " 48 8 
Save where thou art not, though I 

feel thou art " 48 10 

From where thou art " 51 3 

That thou art blamed " 70 1 
But thou art all my art and dost 

advance " 78 13 

Thou art as fair " 82 5 

And therefore art enforced to seek " 82 7 

thou art too dear " 87 1 

though thou art forsworn " 88 4 

thou art assured mine " 92 2 

I live supposing thou art true " 93 1 

Where art thou. Muse, that thou " 100 1 

thou art my all " 109 14 
Thou art as tyrannous, so as thou 

art " 131 1 

Thou art the fairest " 131 4 

In nothing art thou black " 131 13 

For thou art covetous " 134 6 

Be wise as thou art cruel " 140 1 

AVho art as black as hell " 147 14 

But thou art twice forsworn " 152 2 

For thou art all, and all things L C 266 

Celestial as thou art P P 5 13 

As — Even .... the sun V A 1 

Ten kisses short as one, one long as 

twenty " 22 

red and hot as coals " 35 

him, as she would be thrust " 41 

along as he was down " 43 

Even as an empty eagle " 55 

steam as on a prey " 63 

ducks as quickly in " 87 

woo'd as I entreat thee now " 97 

thine own as well as mine " 117 

My beauty as the spring " 141 



AS 



27 



AS 



As— flinty, hard .... steel T'.l 199 

Smiles as in disdain " 241 

As from a furnace " 274 

as if he told the steps " 277 

As who should say " 280 

As if the dead " 292 

She answers him as if " 308 

proud, as females are " 309 

As they were mad " 323 

as desperate in his suit " 3.36 

Even as a dying coal " 338 

as lightning from the sky " 348 

before him as he sat " 349 

as apt as new-fall'n snow " 354 

eyes as they had not seen them " 357 

thou wert as I am " 369 

all whole as thine " 370 

Thy palfrey, as he should " 385 

my love to thee be still as much " 442 

Even as the wind is hush'd " 458 

Or as the wolf doth grin " 459 

Or as the berry breaks " 460 

lies as she were slain " 473 

And as the bright sun " 485 

As if from thence " 488 

And as they last " 507 

as the fleet-foot roe " 561 

Even as poor birds " 601 

As those poor birds " 604 

assay'd as much as " 608 

As fearful of him " 630 

beauties as he roots the mead " 636 

As air and water do abate " 654 

As if another chase " 696 

As burning fevers " 739 

As mountain snow " 750 

As caterpillars do " 798 

she darts, as one on shore " 817 

amazed, as one " 823 

'stonish'd as night wanderers " 825 

as seeming troubled " 830 

as thou dost lend " 864 

And as she runs " 871 

bleeding as they go " 924 

as one full of despair " 955 

As striving who " 968 

As scorning it should pass " 982 

When as I met the boar " ..... 999 

As one with treasure " 1022 

As falcons to the lure " 1027 

as murdered with the view " 1031 

Or, as the snail " 1033 

As when the wind " 1046 

As if they heard " 1126 

As dry combustious matter " 1162 

know, it is as good " 1181 

my breast as in his blood " 1182 

mortal stars, as bright as heaven's 

beauties H L 13 

as soon decay'd and done " 23 

As is the morning's silver-melting 

dew " 24 

As one of which doth " 127 

As life for honour in fell battle's 

rage " 145 

As from this cold flint I enforced 

this fire " ..... 181 

As in revenge or quittal " 236 

But as he is my kinsman " 237 



As — First red roses R L 258 

Then white as lawn " 259 

had Narcissus seen her as she stood " 265 

As corn o'ergrown by weeds " 281 

Both which, as servitors to the un- 
just " 285 

That eye which him beholds as 

more divine " 291 

as minutes fill up hours " 297 

And as their captain " 298 

But, as they open " 304 

As each unwilling portal " 309 

As who should say " 320 

Or as those bars which stop " 327 

As if the heavens should counte- 
nance his sin " 343 

Look, as the fair and flery-pointed 

sun " 372 

As if between them twain " 405 

As the grim lion " 421 

as proud of such a dignity " 437 

Whose ranks of blue veins as his 

hand did scale " 440 

Imagine her as one in dead of night " 449 

But as reproof and reason beat it 

dead " 489 

as fowl hear falcon's bells " 511 

A fault unknown is as a thought 

unacted . " 527 

With such black payment as thou 

hast pretended " 576 

Look as the full-fed hound " 694 

Were Tarquin Night as he is but 

Night's child " 785 

As palmers' chat makes short their 

pilgrimage " 791 

That is as clear from this attaint " 825 

As I, ere this, was pure to Collatine " 826 

hours wait on them as their pages " 910 

As well to hear as grant what he 

hath said " 915 

As slanderous death's-man to so 

base a slave " 1001 

As smoke from MXua, that in air 

consumes " 1042 

As from a mountain spring that 

feeds " 1077 

testy as a child " 1094 

And as one shifts another straight 

ensues " 1104 . 

As the dank earth weeps " 1130 

These means, as frets upon an in- 
strument '• 1140 

As shaming any eye " 1143 

As the poor frighted deer " 1149 

And as his due " 1183 

As winter meads when sun doth " 1218 

But as the earth doth weep " 1226 

are they form'd as marble will " 1241 

as in a rough-grown grove " 1249 

to hie as fast " 1334 

As lagging fowls before the north- 
ern blast " 1335 

as knowing Tarquin's lust " 1354 

As heaven, it seem'd " 1372 

As 'twere encouraging " 1402 

As if some mermaid " 1411 

As, but for loss of Nestor's golden 

words " 1420 



AS 



28 



AS 



As — For even .... subtle Siuon here 

is painted R L 1541 

As if with grief or travail " 1543 

as Priam did him cherish " 1546 

wretched as he is he strives in vain " 1635 

As through an arch the violent 

roaring tide " 1667 

As bound in knighthood to her im- 
position " 1697 

as if her heart would break " 1716 

and, as it left the place " 1735 

as pitying Lucrece' woes " 1747 

starts CoUatine as from a dream " 1772 

as if the name he tore " 1787 

As silly-jeering idiots are with kings " 1812 

But as the riper should by time de- 
cease Son 1 3 
Be, as thy presence is, gracious " 10 11 
As fast as thou shalt wane " 11 1 
And die as fast as they see others 

grow " 12 12 
As truth and beauty shall together 

thrive " 14 11 
When I perceive that men as plants 

increase " 15 5 

As he takes from you " 15 14 

it is but as a tomb " 17 3 

So long as men can breathe " 18 13 
Make glad and sorry seasons as 

thou fieet'st " 19 5 
With shifting change as is false 

women's fashion " 20 4 

Kature as she wrought thee " 20 10 
So is it not with me as with that 

Muse " 21 1 

my love is as fair " 21 10 

As any mother's child " 21 11 

As those gold candles " 21 12 
So long as youth and thou are of 

one date " 22 2 

live as thine in me " 22 7 
As I, not for myself, but for thee 

will " 22 10 

As tender nurse her babe " 22 12 

As an unperfect actor " 23 1 

But as the marigold at the sun's eye " 25 6 

wit so poor as mine " 26 5 

pay as if not paid before " 30 12 

As interest of the dead " 31 7 

As thou being mine " 36 14 

As a decrepit father takes delight " 37 1 
As soon as think the place where 

he would be " 44 8 

As thus ; mine eye's due " 46 13 
When as thy love hath cast his 

utmost sum " 49 3 

As if bj' some instinct " 50 7 

So am I as the rich " 52 1 

keeps you as my chest " 52 9 

Or as the wardrobe " 52 10 

as your bounty doth appear " 53 11 
The canker-blooms have full as 

deep a dye " 54 5 

As the perfumed tincture " 54 6 

and play as wantonly " 54 7 

Like as the waves make toward " 60 1 

no face so gracious is as mine " 62 5 

As I all other in all worths surmount " 62 8 

my love shall be, as I am now " 63 1 



As — This thought is ... . a death Son 
As to behold desert a beggar-born " 
lived and died as flowers do now " 
And him as for a map doth Nature 

store " 

even so as foes commend " 

Do not so much as my poor name 

rehearse " 

As after sunset fadeth in the west " 
As the death-bed whereon it must 

expire " 

So are you to my thoughts as food 

to life " 

Or as sweet-season'd showers " 

As 'twixt a miser and his wealth " 
Now proud as an enjoyer " 

. For as the sun is daily new and old " 
so oft as thou wilt look " 

As every alien pen hath got " 

As high as learning my rude ignor- 
ance " 
your worth wide as the ocean is " 
The humble as the proudest sail " 
Thou art as fair in knowledge as 

in hue " 

As victors, of my silence cannot 

boast " 

as a dream doth flatter " 

As I'll myself disgrace " 

are themselves as stone " 

As on the finger of a throned queen " 
As thou being mine mine is thy 

good report ~ " 

As with your shadow I with these " 
seem long hence as lie shows now " 
As Philomel in summer's front " 
For as you were when first " 

Nor my beloved as an idol show " 
such a beauty as you master now " 
Supposed as forfeit to a confined 

doom " 

Even as when first I hallow'd " 

As easy might I from myself de- 
part " 
As from my soul which in thy breast " 
such cherubins as your sweet self 

resemble " 

As fast as objects to his beams as- 
semble " 
Like as, to make our appetites " 
As, to prevent our maladies " 
from limbecks foul as hell within " 
As I by yours you've pass'd " 
And soon to you as you to me " 
so long as brain and heai-t " 
As subject to Time's love " 
Thy lover's withering as thy sweet 

self " 

As thou goest onwards still will 

pluck " 

hated as a swallow'd bait " 

I think my love as rare " 

As any she belied with false compare " 
Thou art as tyrannous so as thou art " 
As those whose beauties proudly 

make " 

this slander, as I think, proceeds ' " 
and they, as pitying me " 

As those two mourning eyes " 



04 


13 


66 


2 


68 


2 


68 


13 


69 


4 


71 


11 


73 


6 



75 


1 


75 


2 


75 


4 


75 


5 


76 


13 


77 


13 


78 


3 


78 


14 


SO 


5 


SO 


6 



86 


11 


87 


13 


89 


7 


94 


3 


96 


5 


96 


14 


98 


14 


101 


14 


102 


7 


104 


2 


105 


2 


106 


8 


107 


4 


108 


8 


109 


3 


109 


4 



114 


8 


lis 


1 


118 


3 


119 


2 


120 


6 


120 


11 


122 


5 


124 


3 



126 


6 


129 


7 


130 


13 


130 


14 


131 


1 


131 


2 


131 


14 


132 


1 


132 


9 



AS 



29 



AT 



As — then .... well beseem thy heart Son 132 10 

that him as fast doth bind " 134 8 

Be wise as thou art cruel " 140 1 

As testy sick men when their death " 140 7 

false bonds of love as oft as mine " 142 7 

I love thee as thou lovest those " 142 9 

thine eyes woo as mine importune " 142 10 

as a careful housewife " 148 1 

That follow'd it as gentle day " 145 10 

My love is as a fever " 147 1 
My thoughts and my discourse as 

madmen's are " 147 11 
Who art as black as hell, as dark as 

night " 147 14 

so true as all men's " 148 8 

As his triumphant pi'ize " 151 10 

As often shrieking X C 20 

As they did battery " 23 

hours, observed as they flew " GO 

I might as yet have been " 75 

If best were as it was " 98 

His qualities were beauteous as his 

form " 99 

As oft 'twixt May and April " 102 

as some my equals did " 148 

heart so much as warmed " 191 

rubies red as blood " 198 

As compound love to physic your 

cold breast " 259 

Appear to him as he to me appears " ...'.. 299 

as it best deceives " 306 

Such looks as none could look P P 4 4 

Celestial as thou art " 5 13 

wistly as this queen on him " 6 12 
but not so fair as fickle "71 
Mild as a dove "72 
and yet, as glass is, brittle "73 
and yet as iron rusty "74 

as straw with fire flameth " 7 13 

as soon as straw out-burneth " 7 14 
As they must needs "82 
As passing all conceit "88 

When as himself to singing " 8 12 

god of both, as poets feign " 8 13 

And as he fell to her " 11 4 

As if the boy should use " 11 8 

And as she fetched breath " 11 11 

And as goods lost are seld or never " 13 7 

As vaded gloss no rubbing " 13 8 

As flowers dead lie wither'd " 13 9 

As broken glass no cement " 13 10 

As take the pain " 14 12 

as well as well might be " 16 2 

When as thine eye hath chose " 19 1 

As well as fancy " 19 4 

Had women been so strong as men " 19 23 

As it fell upon a day " 21 1 

poor bird, as all forlorn " 21 9 

Whilst as fickle Fortune smiled " 21 29 

So they loved, as love in twain P T 25 

As chorus to their tragic scene " 52 

A-shaking — sets every joint RL 452 

Ashamed — Art thou to kiss V A 121 

Like stars ashamed of day " 1032 

Ashes— So of shame's shall my 

fame be bred RL 1188 

That on the ashes of his youth Srni 73 10 

Ashy— 
gleam'd forth their .... lights R L 1378 



Ashy-pale — and anger.... VA 76 

Nor ashy-pale the fear R L 1512 

Asitle — 

sees the lurking serpent steps .... " 362 

do I not glance aside Son 76 3 

to glance thine eye aside " 139 6 

Ask — And asks the weary caitiff V A 914 

To ask the spotted princess R L 721 

Butdurst not ask of her audaciously " 1223 

to ask her how she fares " 1594 

Askance— all he holds her VA 342 

That Irom their own misdeeds 

askance their eyes R L 637 

Askance and strangely Son 110 6 

Asked — Then being ask'd where all 

thy beauty lies "25 

Ask'd their own wills and made 

their wills obey LC 133 

Asleep — and fell .... Son 153 1 

Love-god lying once asleep " 154 1 

Aspect — With pure aspects did him 

peculiar duties R L 14 

Whose grim aspect sets every joint 

a-shaking " 452 

graciously with fair aspect Son 26 10 

Aspire — but light and will ... . VA 150 

in pale embers hid lurks to aspire R L 5 

Aspiring — 

the .... mountains hiding " 548 

Ass.ail — such passion her assails " 1562 

when they to assail begun X C 262 

Assailed — When shame assail'd R X 63 

Assail'd by night with circum- 
stances " 1262 

therefore to be assailed Son 41 6 

Either not assail'd or victor " 70 10 

Assault — by strong it is bereft R X 835 

Assay— sick and short assays •' 1720 

she must herself assay Z C 156 

Assayed— She hath assay'd as much VA 60S 

Assemble — objects to his beams .... Son 114 8 

Assig'ned — theirs in thought assign'd LC 138 

Assist — they then .... me in the act i? X 350 

Assistance — fair .... in my verse Son 78 2 

Assuage — love's fire doth .... V A 334 

woe doth woe assuage R L 790 

suffering ecstasy assuage X C 69 

Assuaged — his fury was ... . VA 318 

Assure — I would .... thee " 371 

dear friend, and I assure ye Son 111 13 

Assured — come back again ... . " 45 11 

thou art assured mine " 92 2 

now crown themselves assured " 107 7 

grew to faults assured " 118 10 

always with assured trust P P 19 31 

Astonished — 

'stonish'd as night wanderers VA 825 

astonish'd with this deadly deed R X 1730 

my verse astonished Son 85 8 

Astronomy — methinks I have .... " 14 2 

Asunder — girths he breaks ... . VA 266 

Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T 29 

At — with herself ... . strife VA 11 

stone at rain relenteth " 200 

At this Adonis smiles " 241 

Struck dead at first " 250 

that smiles at thee " 252 

workmanship at strife " 291 

Anon he starts at stirring " 802 



AT 



30 



ATTIRED 



•At — Spurns.... his love VA 311 

other agents aim at like delights " 400 

And at his look " 463 

at thy leisure, one by one " 518 

And yields at last " 566 

picks them all at last " 576 

trembles at his tale " 591 

having thee at vantage " 635 

Knocks at my heart " 659 

tremble at the imagination " 668 

at the timorous flying hare " 674 

Or at the fox " 675 

Or at the roe " 676 

hounds are at a bay " 877 

nought at all respecting " 911 

nought at all effecting " 912 

At apparitions, signs " 926 

at these sad signs " 929 

thou should'st strike at it " 938 

at random dost thou hit " 940 

at him should have fled " 947 

Even at this word " 1025 

So, at his bloody view " 1037 

melt at mine eyes' red fire " 1073 

whet his teeth at him again " 1113 

at such high-proud rate JR L 19 

When at Collatium this proud lord 

arrived " 50 

ere rich at home he lands " 336 

Lies at the mercy of his mortal sting " 364 

blush at her own disgrace " 479 

hang their heads at this disdain " 521 

Beat at thy rocky and wreck- 
threatening heart " 590 

Melt at ray tears " 594 

enters at an iron gate " ..j.. 595 

■wither at the cedar's root " 665 

May set at noon " 784 

that spurn'st at right, at law, at 

reason " 880 

to mock at him " 989 

At his own shadow " 997 

I rail at Opportunity " 1023 

At Time, at Tarquin " 1024 

I spurn at my conflrm'd despite " 1026 

why quiver'st thou at this decree " 1030 

at least I give " 1053 

Nor shall he smile at thee " 1065 

Nor laugh with his companions at 

thy state " 1066 

grieves most at that would do it good " 1117 

weeps at thy languishment " 1130 

So I at each sad strain " 1131 

frighted deer that stands at gaze " 1149 

to guess at others' smarts " 1238 

a press of people at a door " 1301 

At last she thus begins " 1303 

At Ardea to my lord " 1332 

At last she calls to mind " 1366 

Bhoot their foam at Simois' banks " 1442 

At last she sees a wretched image " loOl 

At last she smilingly with this 

gives o'er " 1567 

At last he takes her " 1597 

At length address'd " 1606 

Or, at the least " 1654 

At this request, with noble disposi- 
tion " 1695 

all at once began to say " 1709 



At — ^blushing .... that which is so 

putrified R L 1750 

At last it rains, and busy winds give " 1790 

Who, wondering at him " 1845 

to thyself at least kind-hearted 

prove Son 10 12 

at height decrease " 15 7 

as the marigold at the sun's eye " 25 6 
at a frown they in their glory die " 25 8 
to the lark at break of day arising " 29 11 
sings hymns at heaven's gate " 29 12 

grieve at grievances foregone " .30 9 

No more be grieved at that which " 35 1 
are at a mortal war " 46 1 

From whence at pleasure " 48 12 

no precious time at all to spend " 57 3 
Or at your hand the account of 

hours to crave " 58 3 

being at your beck " 58 5 

Since mind at first in character " 59 8 
At first the very worst " 90 12 

wonder at the lily's white " 98 9 

shoot not at me " 117 12 

Grows fairer than at first " 119 12 

At my abuses reckon up their own " 121 10 
Or, at the least so loug as brain " 122 5 
Not wondering at the present " 123 10 

At such who, not born fair " 127 11 

At the wood's boldness " 128 8 

At random from the truth " 147 12 

But rising at thy name " 151 9 

But at my mistress' eye Love's 
brand new-fired " 153 9 

To every place at once L C 27 

To blush at speeches rank, to weep 

at woes " 307 

swound at tragic shows " 308 

jest at every gentle offer PP 4 12 

I had my lady at this bay " 11 13 

Yet at my parting " 14 7 

to jest at my exile " 14 9 

Plays not at all " 18 30 

will yield at length " 19 21 

They have at commandment " 21 46 

Attaint — sickness, whose .... V A 741 

from this attaint of mine R L 825 

poison thee with my attaint " 1072 

mayst without attaint or look Son 82 2 
age shall them attaint PP 19 46 

Attainted — wherein I am .... Son 88 7 

Attempt— 
I see crosses my .... will bring R L 491 

Attend— hereafter shall VA 1136 

these lets attend the time R L 330 

tie the hearers to attend each line " 81S 

Thepostattends, and she delivers it " 1333 

thy Lucrece now attend me " 1682 

I must attend time's leisure Son 44 12 
to attend this double voice L C 3 

Attended — to your wanton talk .... VA 809 

too early I attended L C 78 

Attendeth — Which speechless woe of 

his poor she .... R L 1674 

Attending — Attending on his golden 

pilgrimage Son 7 8 

captive good attending captain ill " 66 12 

Attention— that it beguiled RL 1404 

With sad attention " 1610 

Attired — . ... in discontent " 1601 



ATTORNEY 



31 



BACK 



Attorney — heart's .... once is mute VA 335 

A-turning— and yet she fell ... . PP 7 16 
Her fancy fell a-turning " 16 4 

A-twain — breaking rings .... L C 6 

Audaciously — ask of her .... EL 1223 

Audacit)- — life and bold ... . " 1346 

Audience — End Tvithout . . . . VA 846 

Lending soft audience L C 278 

Audit — What acceptable .... canst 

thou leave * Son 4 12 

Call'd to that audit by advised re- 
spects " 49 4 
Her audit, though delay'd, answer'd 
must be " 126 11 

and to your audit comes L C 230 

Aught — Nor .... obeys Jt L 546 

if aught in me Son 38 5 

Were 't aught to me " 125 1 

there may be aught applied L C 68 

Augmenting — nothing by it EL 154 

Augur — And the sad augurs mock 

their own presage Son 107 6 

Augur of the fever's end P T 7 

Auspicious — stand .... to the hour E L 347 

Author— of thy slander V A 1006 

author of their obloquy E L 523 

the authors of their ill " 1244 

Authority—. ... for sin " 620 

tongue-tied by authority Son 66 9 

Authorized — with his .... youth L C 104 

Authorizing — thy trespass Son 35 6 

Autumn — The teeming .... big with 

rich increase " 97 6 

to yellow autumn turn'd " 104 5 

Avail — it small avails my mood E L 1273 

Araunt — childish fear ... . " 274 

Airake — Awake, thou Eoman dame " 1628 

Awakes my heart Son 47 14 

keeps mine eye awake " 61 10 

Awaketh — frenzy thus .... EL 1675 

Award — That she that makes me sin 

awards me pain Son 141 14 

Away — her object will .... VA 255 

Away he springs " 258 

thyself art made away " 763 

now I will away " 807 

away she flies " 1027 

My sighs are blown away " «... 1071 

away she hies " 1189 

away by brain-sick rude desire E L 175 

the roses took away " «... 259 

Away he steals " 283 

can be wiped away " 608 

Bearing away the wound " 731 

remains a hopeless cast-away " 744 

fly with the filth away - " 1010 

the treasure stol'n away " 1056 

her bark being peel'd away " 1169 

was Tarquin gone away " 1281 

The grief away that stops " 1664 

with a joyless smile she turns away " 1711 

do not take away " 1796 

would make the world away Son 11 8 

To give away yourself " 16 13 

Thyself away art present " 47 10 

Stealing away the treasure " 63 8 

and take my love away " 64 12 

The right of sepulchres, were shorn 
away " 68 6 



Away — black night doth take .... Son 73 7 

shall carry me away " 74 2 

on all, or all away " 75 14 

and I be cast away " 80 13 

All this away and me " 91 14 

to steal thyself away " 92 1 

might'st thou lead away " 96 11 

And, thou away, the very birds " 97 12 

winter still, and you away " 98 13 

feather'd creatures broke away ■ " 143 2 

to hell is flown away " 145 12 

'I hate' from hate away she threw " 145 13 

He rose and ran away P P 4 14 

away he skips " 11 11 

till I run away " 11 14 

that kept my rest away " 14 2 

And drives away " 15 8 

did bear the maid away " 16 14 

with scorn she put away " 19 18 

Awe — be kept in ... . EL 245 

Awed — 

.... resistance made him fret V A 69 

Awhile — Counsel may stop .... L C 159 

A-work — So Lucrece set ... . EL 1496 

Ay — 'Ay me,' quoth Venus VA 187 

'Ay me,' she cries " 833 

ay, if the fact be known E L 239 

Ay me! the bark " 1167 

Ay me ! but yet thou might'st <Sb« 41 9 

Ay, fill it full with wills " 1.36 6 

ay, dieted in grace L C 261 

Ay me! I fell " 321 

Aye — antiquity for ... . his page Son 108 12 

Azure — Her .... veins EL 419 

Babe — ne'er pleased her .... so well VA 974 

fright her crying babe with Tar- 

quin's name E L 814 

Who, having two sweet babes " 1161 

nurse her babe from faring ill Son 22 12 

Love is a babe " 115 13 

Sets down her babe " 143 3 

Whilst I thy babe chase thee " 143 10 

Back — on so proud a . . .. VA 300 

his back, his breast " 396 

she on her back " 594 

On his bow-back " 619 

on his back doth lie " 663 

upon her back " 814 

Then fell she on her back P P 4 13 

Back — beating reason .... VA 557 

But back retires " 906 

I could not put him back E L 843 

would'st thou one hour come back " 965 

bears back all boll'n and red " 1417 

mindful messenger come back " 1583 

Back to the strait " 1670 

and back the same grief draw " 1673 

Held back his sorrow's tide " 1789 

Calls back the lovely April ' Son 3 10 

not to give back again " 22 14 

now come back again assured " 45 11 

I send them back again " 45 14 

can hold his swift foot back " 65 11 

And so my patent back again is 

swerving " 87 8 

still will pluck thee back " 126 6 

turn back to me " 143 11 

If thou turn back " 143 14 



BACK 



32 



BASE 



Back — ^Nymphs .... peeping PP 18 43 

though she put thee back " 19 36 

Back'd— The colt that's back'd and 

burden'd VA 419 

My will is back'd with resolution R L 352 

Back'st— Thou reproach " 622 

Backward — 

Backward she push'd him VA 41 

and backward drew " 541 

Shrinks backward in his shelly 

cave " 1034 

O, that record could with a back- 
ward look Son 59 5 
Bad— Being so ...., such numbers 

seek for thee RL 896 

that to bad debtors lends " 964 

O Time, thou tutor both to good and 

bad " 995 

before these last so bad Son 67 14 

So you o'er-green my bad, my good 

allow " 112 4 

Creating every bad a perfect best " 114 7 
count bad what I think good " 121 8 

All men are bad and in their bad- 
ness reign " 121 14 
■world is grown so bad " 140 11 
Till my bad angel fire my good one 

out " 144 14 

Till my bad angel fire my good one 

out PP 2 14 

Bad in the best " 7 18 

Bade— She love last " 7 16 

She bade good night " 14 2 

bade me come to-morrow " 15 12 

Badge— A of fame R L 1054 

But heavy tears badges of either's 

woe Son 44 14 

Badness— in their reign " 121 14 

Bail— That blow did .... it RL 1725 

Without all bail Son 74 2 

let my poor heart bail " 133 10 

Bait— 

She touch'd no unknown baits R L 103 

as a swallow'd bait Son 129 7 
would not touch the bait PP 4 11 
Balk — Make slow pursuit, or alto- 
gether RL 696 

Ball — Are balls of quenchless fire " 1554 

their poor balls are tied L C 24 

Balm — in her passion calls it ... . VA 27 

And drop sweet balm R L 1466 

Balmy — of this most time Son 107 9 

Ban — And bitter words to .... her 

cruel foes R L 14G0 

And ban and brawl PP 19 20 

Band — 

her arms infold him like a . . . . V A 225 

Or ivory in an alabaster band " 363 

news from the warlike band R L 255 

Bane — 

my body's .... would cure thee V A 372 

Banish— Everything did.... moan PP 21 7 
Banish 'd — 

the plague is by thy breath V A 510 

Banishment — 

Tarquin's everlasting banishment P X, 1855 

Bank — force it overflow the .... VA 72 

this primrose bank whereon I lie " 151 

the bounding banks o'erflows R L 1119 



Bank — To Simois' reedy banks R L 1437 

Shoot their foam at Simois' banks " 1442 

Come daily to the banks Son 56 11 

Bankrupt— But blessed VA 466 

bankrupt in this poor-rich gain R L 140 

Like to a bankrupt beggar " 711 

now Nature bankrupt is Son 67 9 

Banner — 

when his gaudy .... is display'd R L 272 

Banning — Banning his boi^iterous 

unruly beast VA 326 

Banquet — But, 0, what .... " 445 

to the painted banquet bids Son 47 6 

Bar — Or as those bars which stop the 

hourly dial R L 327 

AVhilst I whom fortune of such tri- 
umph bars Son 25 3 
thy picture's sight would bar " 46 3 
\inder truest bars to thrust " 48 2 
Bare — 

What .... excuses makest thou VA 188 

On her bare breast R L 439 

Bare and unpeopled " 1741 

May make seem bare Son 26 6 

Uttering bare truth " 69 4 

Bare ruin'd choirs where late the " 73 4 
The argument all bare " 103 3 

Whose bare out-bragg'd the web L C 95 

age like winter bare P P 12 4 

Bare-boned — Shows me a death P i 1761 

Bareness — and .... everywhere Son 5 8 
December's bareness everywhere " 97 4 
Bargain — 

What bargains may I make V A 512 

Bark — though a thousand ... . " 240 

the bark peel'd from the lofty pine PX 1167 

her bark being peel'd away " 1169 

My saucy bark, inferior far to his Son 80 7 
to every wandering bark " 116 7 

Barketh— 

wolf doth grin before he ... . V A 459 

Barn — And useless barns the harvest 

of his wits R L 859 

Barr'd— When it is ... . VA 330 

to be barr'd of rest " 784 

barr'd him from the blessed thing R L 340 

Barren — 

lean, and lacking juice VA 136 

barren dearth of daughters " 754 

his barren skill to show R L 81 

trees I see barren of leaves Son 12 5 

barren rage of death's eternal cold " 13 12 
than my barren rhyme " 16 4 

so barren of new pride " 76 1 

The barren tender of a poet's debt " 83 4 
Barrenly — featureless and rude, .... 

perish " 11 10 

Base— To bid the wind a VA 303 

Or laid great bases for eternity Son 125 3 

Pa^e- Throwing the base thong VA 395 

Hiding base sin in plaits of majesty P 7/ 93 

digression is so vile, so base " 202 

Thou nobly base, they basely digni- 
fied " 660 

to the base shrub's foot " 664 

Unto the base bed " 671 

Base watch of woes " 928 

For who so base would such an of- 
fice have " 1000 



BASE 



33 



BE 



Base — deathsraan to so .... a slave R L 1001 

to let base clouds o'ertake me Son 34 3 

Too base of thee to be remembered " 74 12 

■with base infection meet " 94 11 

to lend base subjects light " 100 4 

to base touches prone " 141 6 

Basely— They fly, and dare not VA 894 

they basely dignified B L 660 

Basely with gold " 1068 

Baser — The baser is he, coming from 

a king " 1002 

Basest — Anon permit the .... clouds 

to ride Son 33 5 
The basest weed outbraves his dig- 
nity " 94 12 
The basest jewel will be well es- 
teem'd " 96 6 

Bashful — Heburns with. ... shame Fjd 49 

with bashful innocence doth hie B L 1341 

Bastard — This .... grafi" shall never 

come to growth " 1062 

Before these bastard signs Son 68 3 

Fortune's bastard be unfather'd " 124 2 

slander'd with a bastard shame " 127 4 

bastardsof hisfouladulteratehearti C 175 

Bastardy — Thy issue blurr'd with 

nameless .... B L 522 

Bat — upon his grained .... L C 64 

Bate-breeding — this..,, spy VA 655 

Bateless — This . . , , edge on his keen 

appetite B L 9 

Bath — And grew a seething . . ,'. Son 153 7 
the help of bath desired " 153 11 
the bath for my help lies " 153 13 
Growing a bath and healthful rem- 
edy " 154 11 

Bathe — She bathes in water V A 94 

The crow may bathe his coal-black 

wings in mire B L 1009 

bathes the pale fear " 1775 

Bathed — . . . . she in her fluxive eyes L C 50 

Batter — Eude ram, to , . . . such an 

ivory wall B L 464 

Batter'd— His batter'd shield VA 104 

Have batter'd down her conse- 
crated wall B L 723 

Her mansion batter'd by the enemy " 1171 

Battering — siege of ... . days Son 65 6 

Battery — they make no ... ■ V A 426 

As they did battery L C 23 

To leave the battery " 277 

Battle — in ne'er did bow VA 99 

he hath a battle set " 619 

in fell battle's rage B L 145 

to imitate the battle sought " 1438 

The scars of battle L C 244 

Bawd — the to lust's abuse VA 792 

fair reputation but a bawd B L 623 

Blind muffled bawd " 768 

thou notorious bawd " 886 

Bay — the hounds are at a ... , VA 877 

Be anchor'd in the bay where all 

men ride Son 137 6 

Ah, that I had my lady at this bay P P 11 13 

Be— she would .... thrust VA 41 

Till either gorge be stuff'd or prey 

be gone " 58 

0, be not proud " 113 

mine be not so fair " 116 

3 . 



Be— shall thine own VA 117 

Be bold to play " 124 

mayst thou well be tasted " 128 

sweet boy, and may it be " 155 

be of thyself rejected " 159 

with thy increase be fed " 170 

makest thou to be gone " 188 

or else be mute " 208 

in her arms be bound " 226 

Struggles to be gone " 227 

I'll be a park, and thou shalt be my 

deer " 231 

if those hills be dry " 233 

Then be my deer " 239 

He might be buried " 244 

by pleading may be blest " 328 

sorrow may be said " 333 

coal that must be cool'd " 387 

Though thy horse be gone " 390 

dares not be so bold " 401 

Unless it be a boar " ...... 410 

be any jot diminish'd " 417 

should I be in love " 438 

my love to thee be still " 442 

still to be sealing " 512 

can be well contented " 513 

good queen, it will not be " 607 

much as may be proved " 608 

O, be advised " 615 

cannot be easily harm'd " 627 

be ruled by me " 673 

may be compared well " 701 

nature be condemn'd of treason " 729 

Be prodigal: the lamp " 755 

to be barr'd of rest " 784 

ere summer half be done " 802 

to be so curst " 887 

If he be dead, — O no, it cannot be " 937 

Be wreak'd on him " 1004 

To be of such a weak " 1010 

where no breach should be " 1066 

The tiger would be tame " 1096 

should yet be light " 1134 

shall be waited on " 1137 

It shall be fickle " 1141 

Bud, and be blasted " 1142 

It shall be sparing " 1147 

it shall be raging-mad " 1151 

It shall be merciful " 1155 

Perverse it shall be " 1157 

shall be cause of war " 1159 

There shall not be " 1187 

and not be seen " 1194 

kings might be espoused to more 

fame B L 20 

What needeth then apologies be 

made " 31 

by our ears our hearts oft tainted 

be " 38 

between them both it should be 

kill'd " 74 

Though death be adjunct " 133 

So that in venturing ill we leave 

to be " 148' 

if there be no self-trust " 158 

Which must be lode-star to his 

lustful eye " 179 

A martial man to be soft fancy's 

slave " 200 



BE 



34 



BE 



Be— And an eye-sore in my 

golden coat -B L 205 

Would with the sceptre straight be 

strucken down " 217 

Will not my tongue be mute " 227 

if the fact be known " 239 

Shall by a painted cloth be kept in 

awe " 245 

The coward fights, and will not be 

dismayed " 273 

Love and Fortune be my gods " 351 

till their effects be tried " 353 

ere traitors be espied " 361 

To be admired of lewd unhallow'd 

eyes " 392 

The blemish that will never be 

forgot " 536 

Mar not the thing that cannot be 

amended " 578 

End thy ill aim before thy shoot be 

ended " 579 

Be moved with my tears " 588 

and be compassionate " 594 

How will thy shame be seeded in 

thine age " 603 

O, be remember'd " 607 

From vassal actors can be wiped 

away " 608 

Then kings' misdeeds cannot be 

hid in clay " 609 

wilt thou be the school " 617 

Wilt thou be glass " 619 

So shall these slaves be king " 659 

to be thy partner in this shameful 

doom " 672 

would they still in darkness be " 752 

bids her eyes hereafter still be blind " 758 

May likewise be sepulchred " 805 

dear love be kept unspotted " 8^1 

If that be made a theme " 822 

Or kings be breakers " 852 

And leaves it to be master'd by his 

young " 863 

'When wilt thou be the humble 

suppliant's friend " 897 

his suit may be obtain'd " 898 

Be guilty of my death " 931 

To trembling clients be you medi- 
ators " 1020 

by Tarquin's falchion to be slain " 1046 

O no, that cannot be " 1049 

still in night would cloister'd be " 1085 

be you mute and dumb " 1123 

Will slay the other and be nurse to 

none " 1162 

let it not be call'd impiety " 1174 

AVhich by him tainted shall for him 

be spent " 1182 

shall my fame be bred " 1188 

My resolution, love, shall be thy 

boast " 1193 

thou revenged may'st be " 1194 

How Tarquin must be used " 1195 

mine honor be the knife's " 1201 

My shame be his that did my fame 

confound " 1202 

fame that lives disbursed be " 1203 

'So be it " 1209 

both shall victors be " 1211 



Be — No more than wax shall .... ac- 
counted evil R L 1245 

O, let it not be hild " 1257 

if your maid may be so bold " 1282 

if it should be told " 1284 

that deep torture may be call'd a 

hell " 1287 

Bid thou be ready " 1292 

and it will soon be writ " 1295 

the whole to be imagined " 1428 

Let guiltless souls be freed from 

guUty woe " 1482 

' It cannot be,' quoth she " 1534 

It cannot be she in that sense for- 
sook " 1538 

It cannot be, I find " 1539 

his wounds will not be sore " 1568 

Though woe be heavy " 1574 

And my laments would be drawn 

out too long " 1616 

then be this all the task " 1618 

And what wrong else may be im- 
agined " 1622 

By foul enforcement might be done 

to me " 1623 

this act will be " 1637 

And never be forgot " 1644 

Though my gross blood be stain'd 

with this abuse " 1655 

Be suddenly revenged on my foe " 1683 

How may this forced stain be wiped 

from me " 1701 

If they surcease to be " 1766 

And live to be revenged " 1778 

And only must be wail'd by CoUa- 

tine " 1799 

else this glutton be Son 1 13 

Will be a tatter'd weed "24 

this were to be new made " 2 13 

Or who is he so fond will be the tomb " 3 7 
remember'd not to be " 3 13 

when nature calls thee to be gone " 4 11 
beauty must be tomb'd with thee " 4 13 
Which, us'd, lives th' executor to be " 4 14 
ere thou be distill'd "62 

ere it be sclf-kill'd "64 

Or ten times happier be it ten for 

one "68 

Be not self-will'd " 6 13 

To be death's conquest " 6 14 

The world will be thy widow "95 

Which to repair should be thy chief 

desire " 10 8 

Shall hate be fairer lodged " 10 10 

Be, as thy presence is " 10 11 

Be scorn'd, like old men " 17 10 

Mine be thy love " 20 14 

How can I then be elder " 22 8 

be of thyself so wary " 22 9 

let my books be then the eloquence " 23 9 
Where I may not remove nor be 

removed " 25 14 

though they be outstripp'd by every 

pen " 32 G 

No more be grieved at that " 35 1 

That I an accessary needs must be " 35 13 
Let me confess that we two must be 

twain " 36 1 

by me be borne alone " 36 4 



BE 



35 



BE 



Be — ^Be thou the tenth Muse Son 

The pain be mine, but thine shall 

be the praise " 

But yet be blamed " 

yet we must not be foes " 

Gentle thou art, and therefore to be 

won " 

Beauteous thou art, therefore to be 

assailed " 

yet it may be said " 

mine eyes be blessed made " 

I would be brought " 

the place where he would be " 

Until life's composition be recured " 
thence thou wilt be stol'u " 

be it not said " 

Thy edge should blunter be than 

appetite " 

So, love, be thou " 

Let this sad interim like the ocean be " 
more blest may be the view " 

Where you may be " 

Be where you list " 

though waiting so be hell " 

be it ill or well " 

If there be nothing new " 

Or whether revolution be the same " 
my slumbers should be broken " 
Against my love shall be " 

shall in these black lines be seen " 
from these would I be gone " 

That thou art blamed shall not be 

thy defect " 

So thou be good " 

Yet thus thy praise cannot be so thy 

praise " 

Th at I in your sweet thoughts would 

be forgot " 

My name be buried " 

But be contented " 

Too base of thee to be remembered " 
to be with you alone " 

or must from you be took " 

Yet be most proud " 

with thy sweet graces graced be " 
and I be cast away " 

each part will be forgotten " 

Your monument shall be my gentle 

verse " 

And tongues to be your being shall 

rehearse " 

And their gross painting might be 

better used " 

Which shall be most my glory " 

When thou shalt be disposed " 

And I by this will be a gainer too " 
Be absent from thy walks " 

Of more delight than hawks or 

horses be " 

Thou mayst be false " 

Whate'er thy thoughts or thy 

heart's workings be " 

The basest jewel will be well es- 

teem'd " 

If any, be a satire to decay " 

what shall be thy amends " 

wilt thou be dumb " 

And to be praised of ages yet to be " 
you never can be old " 



38 


14 


40 


7 


40 


14 



41 


6 


42 


2 


43 


9 


44 


3 


44 


8 


45 


9 


48 


13 


56 


1 


56 


2 


56 


5 


56 


9 


56 


12 


57 


10 


58 


9 


58 


13 


58 


14 


59 


1 


59 


12 


61 


3 


63 


1 


63 


13 


66 


13 


70 


1 


70 


5 



71 


7 


72 


11 


74 


1 


74 


12 


75 


7 


75 


12 


78 


9 


78 


12 


80 


13 


81 


4 


81 


9 


81 


11 


82 


13 


83 


10 


88 


1 


88 


9 


89 


9 


91 


11 


92 


14 



93 11 



96 


6 


100 


11 


101 


1 


101 


9 


101 


12 


104 


1 



Be — mine eye may .... deceived Son 104 12 

Let not my love be call'd idolatry " 105 1 
Since all alike my songs and praises 

be " 105 3 
That it could so preposterously be 

stain'd " 109 11 
If it be poison'd " 114 13 
although his height be taken '• 116 8 
If this be error " 116 13 
To be diseased " 118 8 
would by ill be cured " 118 12 
'Tis better to be vile " 121 1 
When not to be receives reproach " 121 2 
I may be straight though they them- 
selves be bevel " 121 11 
my deeds must not be shown " 121 12 
thy record never can be miss'd " 122 8 
and this shall ever be " 123 13 
I will be true " 123 14 
It might for Fortune's bastard be 

unfather'd " 124 2 

let me be obsequious " 125 9 
Her audit, though delay'd, answer'd 

must be " 126 11 

To be so tickled " 128 9 

If snow be white " 130 3 

If hairs be wires " 130 4 

I dare not be so bold " 131 7 

And to be sure " 131 9 

and loving mourners be " 132 3 

my sweet'st friend must be " 133 4 

thus to be cross'd " 133 8 

let my heart be his guard " 133 11 

to be my comfort still " 134 4 

nor he will not be free " 134 5 
Though in thy stores' account I one 

must be " 136 10 
Yet what the best is take the worst 

to be " 137 4 

Be anchor'd in the bay " 137 6 

by lies we flatter'd be " 138 14 

Be wise as thou art cruel " 140 1 
As testy sick men, when their 

deaths be near " 140 7 
by mad ears believed be " 140 12 
That I may not be so " 140 13 
desire to be invited " 141 7 
and vassal wretch to be " 141 12 
Be it lawful I love thee " 142 9 
Thy pity may deserve to pitied be " 142 12 
By self-example mayst thou be de- 
nied " 142 14 
kiss me, be kind " 143 12 
would corrupt my saint to be a devil " 144 7 
whether that my angel be turn'd 

fiend " 144 9 
Within be fed, without be rich no 

more " 146 12 

If that be fair " 148 5 
If it be not, then love doth well 

denote " 148 7 

O, how can Love's eye be true " 148 9 

to be beloved of thee " 150 14 

thy poor drudge to be " 151 11 
If that from him there may be 

aught applied L C 68 

unruly though they be " 103 

To be forbod the sweets " 164 

And be not of my holy vows afraid " 179 



BE 



36 



BEATEN 



Be — Tvith acture they may ... . LC 185 

these, of force, must your oblations 

be " 223 

Not to be tempted, would she be 

immured " 251 

Who, young and simple, would not 

be so lover'd " 320 

Although I know my years be past 

the best PP \ 6 

our faults in love thus smother'd be " 1 14 
would corrupt my saint to be a devil " 2 7 
And whetlier that my angel be 

turu'd iiend "29 

If knowledge be the mark "57 

Then must the love be great 'twixt 

thee and me "83 

before the fall should be " 10 6 

Ah, neither be my share " 14 1 

'T may be, she joy'd to jest " 14 9 

'T may be again to make " 14 10 

as well as well might be " 16 2 

But one must be refused " IG 9 

That nothing could be used " 16 10 

What though her frowning brows 

be bent " 19 13 

twice desire, ere it be day " 19 17 

And in thy suit be humble true " 19 32 
be thou not slack " 19 35 

To teach my tongue to be so long " 19 52 
here be it said " 19 53 

Live with me and be my love " 20 1 

Then live with me and be my love " 20 16 
To live with thee and be thy love " 20 20 
Every man will be thy friend " 21 35 

But if store of crowns be scant " 21 37 

If that one be prodigal " 21 39 

If he be addict to vice " 21 43 

If to women he be bent " 21 45 

Herald gad and trumpet be P T 3 

Be the death-diviuiug swan " 15 

Truth may seem, but cannot be " 02 

Truth and beauty buried be " 64 

Beaded— and of jet LC 37 

Beak— Tires with her V A 56 

Whose crooked beak RL 508 

Beam — Whose beams upon his hair- 
less face V A 487 

Mock with thy tickling beams £ L 1090 

to his beams assemble Son 114 8 

Bear — x-ough ...., or lion proud VA 884 

Bear — and sappy plants to bear " 165 

bear her a thousand ways " 907 

to Collatium bears the lightless 

fire R L 4 

Whose crime will bear an ever- 

during blame " 224 

thou perforce must bear " 612 

I mean to bear thee " 670 

She bears the load of lust " 734 

how many bear such shameful blows " 832 

infant sorrows, bear them mild " 1096 

with deep groans the diapason bear " 1132 

let beasts bear gentle minds " 1148 

with greater patience bear it " 1158 

be ready by and by to bear " 1292 

From that suspicion which the 

world might bear her " 1321 

a part of woe doth bear " 1327 

bears back all boll'n and red " 1417 



Bear — signs of rage they .... R L 1419 

burning Troy doth bear " 1474 

such a face should bear a wicked 

mind " 1540 

that map which deep impression 

bears " 1712 

and help to bear thy part " 1830 

conclude to bear dead Lucrece " 1050 

His tender heir might bear his 

memory Son 1 4 
parts that thou shouldst bear "88 
your sweet form should bear " 13 8 
would bear your living flowers " 16 7 
to him that bears the strong of- 
fence's cross " 34 12 
To bear love's wrong " 40 12 
The beast that bears me " 50 5 
to bear that weight in me " 50 6 
Which, laboring for invention, bear 

amiss " 59 3 

thy mind's imprint will bear " 77 3 
as the proudest sail doth bear " 80 6 

myself will bear all wrong " 88 14 

But bears it out even to the edge " 116 12 
One on another's neck, do witness 

bear " 131 11 

Bear thine eyes straight " 140 14 

reading what contents it bears L C 19 

What unapproved witness dost thou 

bear " 53 

in the suffering pangs it bears " 272 

did bear the maid away P P 16 14 

He with thee doth bear a part " 21 56 

Beard — his .... all silver white R L 1405 

with white and bristly beard Son 12 8 

Bearer— Of my dull " 51 2 

Bear'st — agaiustathoru thou . . . .thy 

part R L 1135 

deny that thou bear'st love to any <S'o» 10 1 
Bearing — The .... earth with his 

hard hoof he wounds V A 267 

now press'd with bearing " 430 

no bearing yoke they knew R L 409 

Bearing away the wound " 731 

quick bearing and dexterity " 1389 

Bearingtby heart,whichlwillkeep&?i 22 11 
Bearing the wanton burthen of the 

prime " 97 7 

after new love bearing " 152 4 

Beast — boisterous and unruly .... V A 326 

that bloody beast " 999 

to the rough beast R L 545 

since men prove beasts, let beasts 

bear gentle minds " 1148 

The beast that bears me Son 50 5 

will my poor beast then find " 51 5 

Beasts did leap P P 21 5 
Ruthless beasts they will not cheer 

thee " 21 22 

Beat — beats, and takes no rest V A 647 

now she beats her heart " 829 

beats these from the stage R L 278 

reproof and reason beat it dead " 489 

Beat at thy rocky and wreck-threat- 
ening heart " 590 

The golden bullet beats it down P P 19 30 

Beated — Beated and chopp'd Son 62 10 
Beaten — Beaten away by brain-sick 

rude desire R L 175 



BEATEN 



37 



BEAUTY 



Beaten — quite .... from her breast R L 1563 

the rain on my storm-beaten face Son 84 6 

Beating — 

Beating his kind embracements VA 312 

beating reason back " 557 

Anon his beating heart H L 433 

Beating her bulk " 467 

beating on her breast " 759 

Beauteous — This combat VA 365 

The beauteous influence " 862 

Ne'er saw the beauteous livery " 1107 

possession of his beauteous mate R L 18 

Then, beauteous niggard Son 4 5 

Seeking that beauteous roof " 10 7 

Makes black night beauteous " 27 12 

promise such a beauteous day " 34 1 
Beauteous thou art, therefore to be 

assailed " 41 6 

doth beauty beauteous seem " 54 1 

beauteous and lovely youth " 54 13 

You to your beauteous blessings " 84 13 

Three beauteous springs " 104 5 

beauteous as his form L C 99 

Beautiful — making .... old rhyme Son 106 3 

why 'twas beautiful and hard L C 211 

Beautify — themselves so ... . R L 404 

Beauty — AVhich bred more ... . VA 70 

there thy beauty lies " 119 

Beauty within itself " 130 

My beauty as the spring " 141 

fresh beauty for the use " 164 

beauty breedeth beauty " 167 

That inward beauty " 434 

Were beauty under twenty " 575 

Would root these beauties " 636 

Beauty hath nought to do " 638 

To mingle beauty " 735 

brings beauty under " 746 

Upon fresh beauty " 796 

To stifle beauty and to steal " 934 

his breath and beauty set " 935 

Seeing his beauty " 938 

beauty may the better thrive " 1011 

"with him is beauty slain " 1019 

And, beauty dead " 1020 

But true-sweet beauty " 1080 

every beauty robb'd " 1132 

as bright as heaven's beauties RL 13 

Honour and beauty " 27 

Beauty itself doth of itself " ..:.. 29 

beauty and virtue strived " 52 

beauty would blush for shame " 54 

When beauty boasted blushes " 55 

But beauty, in that white intituled " 57 

virtue claims from beauty beauty's 

red " 59 

Argued by beauty's red " 65 

In that high task hath done her 

beauty wrong " 80 

All orators are dumb when beauty 

pleadeth " 268 

beauty my prize " 279 

Thy beauty hath ensnared thee " 485 

By thy bright beauty '• 490 

an eye to gaze on beauty " 496 

Time's ruin, beauty's wreck " 1451 

her beauty I may tear " 1472 

That my poor beauty had purloin'd 

his eyes " 1651 



Beauty — 

shiver'd all the .... of my glass R L 
That thereby beauty's rose might 

never die Son 

dig deep trenches in thy beauty's 

field " 

being ask'd where all thy beauty 

lies " 

how much more praise deserved thy 

beauty's use " 

Proving his beauty by succession 

thine " 

Upon thyself thy beauty's legacy " 
Thy unused beauty must be tomb'd 

with thee " 

Beauty o'ersnow'd and bareness 

every where " 

Beauty's effect with beauty were 

bereft " 

With beauty's treasure, ere it be " 
mortal looks adore his beauty still " 
But- beauty's waste hath in the 

world an end " 

That beauty still may live " 

wisdom, beauty, and increase " 

of thy beauty do I question make " 
Since sweets and beauties do them- 
selves forsake " 
that beauty which you hold in lease " 
As truth and beauty shall together 

thrive " 

Thy end is truth's and beauty's 

doom " 

If I could write the beauty of your 

eyes " 

For beauty's pattern to succeeding 

men " 

Stirr'd by a painted beauty " 

For all that beauty that doth cover 

thee " 

Thy beauty's form in table of my 

heart " 

For whether beauty, birth, or wealth " 
Thy beauty and thy years full well 

befits " 

And chide thy beauty " 

Hers, by thy beauty tempting her 

to thee " 

Thine, by thy beauty being false to 

me -" 

On Helen's cheek all art of beauty 

set " 

doth shadow of your beauty show " 
0, how much more doth beauty 

beauteous seem " 

delves the parallels in beauty's 

brow " 

Painting my age with beauty of 

thy days " 

all those beauties whereof now he's 

king " 

My sweet love's beauty " 

His beauty shall in these black lines " 
How with this rage shall beauty 

hold a plea " 

who his spoil of beauty can forbid " 
Why should poor beauty indirectly 

seek " 

When beauty lived and died " 





1 


V63 
2 


2 


2 


2 


5 


2 


9 


2 


12 


4 


2 


4 


13 


5 


8 


5 


11 


6 


4 


7 


7 


9 


11 


10 


14 


11 


5 


12 


9 


12 


11 


13 


5 


14 


11 


14 


14 


17 


5 


19 


12 


21 


2 



24 


2 


37 


5 


41 


3 


41 


10 


41 


13 


41 


14 


53 


7 


53 


10 


54 


1 


60 


10 


62 


14 


63 


6 


63 


12 


63 


13 


65 


3 


65 


12 


67 


7 


68 


2 



BEAUTY 



38 



BEEN 



69 


9 


70 


3 


77 


1 


79 


10 


83 


11 



93 13 



95 

101 



101 


7 


104 


3 


104 


9 


104 


14 


106 


3 


106 


5 



Beauty — Ere beauty's dead fleece 

made another gay Son 

to dress his beauty new " 

To show false art what beauty was 

of yore " 

They look into the beauty of thy 

mind " 

The ornament of beauty is suspect " 
Thy glass will show thee how thy 

beauties wear " 

beauty doth he give " 

I impair not beauty being mute " 
like Eve's apple doth thy beauty 

grow " 

Doth spot the beauty of thy bud- 
ding name " 
Where beauty's veil doth cover 

everj"- blot " 

thy neglect of truth in beauty died " 
Both truth and beauty on my love 

depends " 

Beauty no pencil, beauty's truth to 

lay " 

Such seems your beauty still " 

yet doth beauty, like a dial-hand " 
Ere you were born was beauty's 

summer dead " 

beauty making beautiful old rhyme " 
in the blazon of sweet beauty's best " 
Even such a beauty as you master 

now " 106 8 

Tan sacred beauty " 115 7 

it bore not beauty's name " 127 2 

now is black beauty's successive heir " 127 3 
And beauty slander'd with a bas- 
tard shame " 127 4 
Sweet beauty hath no name " 127 7 
who not born fair, no beauty lack " 127 11 
every tongue says beauty should 

look so " 127 14 

those whose beauties proudly make 

them cruel " 131 2 

will I swear beauty herself is black " 132 13 
The statue of thy beauty thou wilt 

take " 134 9 

They know what beauty is " 137 3 

The carcass of a beauty L C 11 

Some beauty peep'd through lattice 

of sear'd age " 14 

Such looks as none could look but 

beauty's queen P P 4 4 

* if not to beauty vowed "52 

Beauty is but a vain and doubtful 

good " 13 1 

So beauty blemish'd once 's forever 

lost " 13 11 

Beauty, truth, and rarity P T 53 

Beauty brag, but 'tis not she " 63 

Truth and beauty buried be " 64 

Became — 

til e horse by him his deed LC Ill 

Because — Because Adonis' heart hath 

made mine hard VA 378 

Because the cry remaineth " 8S5 

Because he would not fear him " 1094 

because it is his own P L 35 

because thou know'st I love her Son 42 6 
Because he needs no praise " 101 9 

Because I would not dull you " 102 14 



Because — 

Because thou lovest the one P P 8 4 
Bechance — Let there .... him pitiful 

mischances P L 976 

Beck — being at your .... Son 58 5 
Become — 

who should best .... her grief VA 968 

the old become a child " 1152 

With words, till action might be- 
come them better P L 1323 

Become the public plague " 1479 

your trespass now becomes a fee So7i 120 13 
Better becomes the gray cheeks of 

the east " 132 6 
As those two mourning eyes be- 
come thy face " 132 9 
Becoming — . ... of their woe " 127 13 
this becoming of things ill " 150 5 

Bed— his tent my VA ...:. 103 

in her naked bed " 397 

from their dark beds " 1050 

Here was thy father's bed " 1183 

is Tarquin brought unto his bed P L 120 

this lustful lord leap'd from his bed " 169 

The Eoman lord marcheth to Lu- 

crece' bed " 301 

on her yet unstained bed " 366 

In his clear bed " 382 

Without the bed her other fair 

hand was " 393 

For in thy bed I purpose to destroy 

thee " 514 

That to his borrow'd bed he make 

retire " 573 

the base bed of some rascal groom " 671 

lust should stain so pure a bed " 684 

yet ere he go to bed " 776 

Kotspend the dowry of a lawful bed " 938 

Afflict him in his bed " 975 

in the interest of thy bed " 1619 

I haste me to my bed Son 27 1 
As the death-bed whereon it must 

expire " 73 11 

Eobb'd others' beds' revenues " 142 8 

Were kisses all the joys in bed P P 19 47 

There will I make thee a bed of 

roses . " 20 9 

Bedabbled— 

the dew-bedabbled wretch VA 703 

Bedchamber— In his " 784 

Bedrid — Afflict him in his bed with 

....groans Pi 975 

Bert-vow — In act thy .... broke Son 152 3 

Bee — and I a drone-like .... R L 836 

the honey which thy chaste bee 

kept " 840 

The old bees die " 1769 

Been — I have . . . . woo'd VA 97 

Yet hath he been my captive " 101 

Thou hadst been gone " 613 

Had I been tooth'd " 1117 

For it had been dishonour P L 844 

Troy had been bright with fame " 1491 

Hath been before Son 59 2 

like a winter hath my absence been " 97 1 

From you have I been absent " 98 1 

I have frequent been with unknown " 117 5 
mine eyes out of their spheres been 

fitted "119 7 



BEEN 



39 



BEHIND 



Been — Her pretty looks have 

mine enemies Son 139 10 
I might as yet have been a spread- 
ing flower L 75 

For feasts of love I have been call'd 

unto " 181 

that often there had been PPG 8 

Had women been so strong as men " 19 23 

Befallen— Hath thee .... B L 1599 

Beflt — Thy beauty and thy years full 

well befits Son 41 3 

Before— Being mad VA 249 

she just before him " 349 

before one leaf put forth " 416 

.1 had my load before " 430 

before it raineth " 458 

before he barketh " 459 

before it staineth " 4fi0 

Before I know myself " 525 

For he the night before It L 15 

And die, unhallow'd thoughts, be- 
fore you blot " 192 

End thy ill aim before thy shoot be 

ended " 579 

Thy vices bud before thy spring " 604 

far poorer than before " 698 

which shall go before " 1302 

As lagging fowls before the north- 
ern blast " 1335 

Before the which is drawn " 1368 

which Brutus made before " 1847 

The eyes, 'fore duteous Son 7 11 

in youth before my sight " 15 10 

as if not paid before " 30 12 

more than thou hadst before " 40 2 

before thou hadst this more " 40 4 

Hath been before, how are our " 59 2 

with that which goes before " 60 3 

before these last so bad " 67 14 

Before these bastard signs " 68 3 

Before the golden tresses " 68 5 

holds his rank before " 85 12 
To mar the subject that before was 

well " 103 10 

Those lines that I before have writ " 115 1 

that we before have heard " 123 8 
Before a joy proposed; behind a 

dream " 129 12 

that which flies before her face " 143 7 

before the fall should be P P 10 6 

They that fawn'd on him before " 21 49 

Beforehand — 

All this .... counsel comprehends R L 494 

Befriend — 

once unkind befriends me now Son 120 1 

Beg— 'Tis but a kiss I beg VA 96 

I'll beg her love BL 241 

but where excess begs all L C 42 

Began — than myself, thus she ... . V A 7 

' pity,' 'gan she cry " 95 

queen began to sweat " 175 

of her thoughts began " 367 

began to turn their tide " 979 

with swelling drops 'gan wet R L 1228 

and their ranks began " 1439 

the strumpet that began this stir " 1471 

Each present lord began to promise 

aid " 1696 

they all at once began to say " 1709 



Began— to clothe his wit R L 1809 

and often 'gan to tear L C 51 

His phcenix down began but to ap- 
pear " 93 

till thus he 'gan besiege me " 177 

shade began to woo him P P 11 2 

All unseen 'gan passage find " 17 6 

Beget — use more gold begets V A 768 

or begets him hate R L 1005 

Beggar— Or what fond " 216 

Like to a bankrupt beggar wails " 711 

a beggar's orts to crave " 985 

As to behold desert a beggar born Son 66 2 

Beggar'd— of blood to blush " 67 10 

Begg'd— And .... for that VA .... 102 

Begin — suitor 'gins to woo him " 6 

she begins to prove " 40 

And 'gins to chide " 46 

she doth anew begin " 60 

and begins to glow " 337 

she begins to forage " 554 

begins a wailing note " 835 

to pray he doth begin R L 342 

doth his tongue begin " 470 

That twice she doth begin ere once " 567 

At last she thus begins " 1303 

And thus begins " 1598 

Begins the sad dirge " 1612 

I did begin to start " 1639 

From his lips new-waxen pale be- 
gins to blow " 1663 

Begins to talk " 1783 

Then begins a journey Son 27 3 

when first it 'gins to bud P P 13 3 
That mine eye loves it and doth 

first begin " 114 14 

Beginning — Find sweet ... . VA 1138 

Begot — Thou wast.... " 168 

Beguile — the truest sight ... . " 1144 

Thou dost beguile the world Son 3 4 
Beguiled— To mock the subtle in 

themselves R L 957 

That it beguiled attention " 1404 

Tarquin armed: so beguiled " 1544 

how are our brains beguiled Son 59 2 

Thou and I were both beguiled P P 21 30 
Beguiling — 

Such time-beguiling sport VA 24 

of his foul beguiling L C 170 

Begrimed — Begrimed with sweat R L 1381 

Begun — ere his words .... VA 462 

stories, oftentimes begun " 845 

cancell'd ere well begun RL 26 

the curtain drawn, his eyes begun " 374 

all that youth begun L C 12 

when they to assail begun " 262 

Behaviour — Her sad feeds RL 556 

From thy behaviour Son 79 10 

Beheld— his shadow VA 1099 

where herself herself beheld " 1129 

What he beheld RL 416 

beheld some ghastly sprite " 451 

despairing Hecuba beheld " 1447 

Behest — break ers of their own behests " 852 

Behind — Behind some hedge V A 1094 

the load of lust he left behind R L 734 

The scalps of many, almost hid be- 
hind " 1413 

an armed hand ; himself behind " 1425 



BEHIND 



40 



BEING 



Behind — 

no form of tliee hast left .... Son 9 

grief lies onward, and vaj joy be- 
hind " 50 

behind, a dream " 129 

I thy babe chase thee afar behind " 143 
Behold — Who doth the world so glo- 
riously .... V A 

behold two Adons dead " 

' That eye which him beholds as 

more divine R L 

this tumult to behold " 

she never may behold the day " 

which they themselves behold " 

Let not the jealous Day behold that 
face " 

And scarce hath eyes his treasure 
to behold " 

any eye should thee behold " 

The heavy motion that it doth be- 
hold . " 

every eye beholds their blame " 

You might behold " 

Of physiognomy might one behold " 

the eye that doth behold Ms haste " 

that beholds her bleed " 

I often did behold " 

When I behold the violet Son 12 

in thee time's furrows I behold " 22 

As to behold desert a beggar born " 66 

That time of year thou mayst in 
me behold " 73 

now behold these present days " 106 

Yet, in good faith, some say that 
thee behold 

That they behold, and see not 

though in me you behold L C 

behold these talents " 

Beholding — that pines .... food R L 

her sad-beholding husband saw " 
Behoof- 
harms that preach in our .... L C 
Being — . . . . set, I'll smother V A 

Being wasted in such 

Being so enraged 

Being red, she loves him best ; and 
being white 

Who being look'd on 

Being judge in love • 

Being mad before 

being tied unto a tree 

Being proud, as females are 

And being steel'd 

the weather being cold 

burden'd being young 

Being nurse and feeder 

Or being early pluck'd 

bird being tamed 

Like lawn being spread 

Being moved, he strikes 

Being ireful, on the lion 

fresh flowers being shed 

with others being mingled 

And being low 

milk and blood being mingled 

Being prison'd in her eye 

For he being dead 

horns being hit 

And being open'd 



131 

137 



14 
12 
10 

857 
1070 

291 
447 
746 
751 



857 
1143 

1326 

1343 

1388 

1395 

1668 

1732 

1758 

3 

3 

2 

1 
13 

5 

2 

71 

204 

1115 

1590 

165 
18 
24 
29 

77 
87 
?20 
249 
263 
309 
376 
402 
419 
446 
528 
560 
590 
623 
628 
665 
691 
708 
902 
980 
1019 
1033 
1051 



Being— the brain troubled VA 1068 

and, being gone " 1089 

That, thou being dead " 1134 

The sovereignty of either being so 

great R L 69 

He makes excuses for his being 

there " 114 

The guilt being great " 229 

her hand in my hand being lock'd " 260 

And being lighted " 316 

The curtains being close " 367 

To wink, being blinded " 375 

being so applied " 531 

The flesh being proud " 712 

Being so bad, such numbers seek for 

thee • " 896 

The moon being clouded " 1007 

Who, being stopp'd " 1119 

her bark beiug peel'd away " 1169 

the other being dead '• 1187 

doth weep, the sun being set " 1226 

sorrow ebbs being blown with " 1330 

His nose being shadow'd " 1416 

Here one being throng'd " 1417 

Being from the feeling of her own 

grief brought " 1578 

recall'd in rage, being past " 1671 

Being constrain'd with dreadful 

circumstance " 1703 

Which being done " 1853 

Then being ask'd Son 2 5 
And being frank she lends "44 
Whosespeechless song, being many, 

seeming one " 8 13 

As thou being mine " 36 14 
Thine by thy beauty being false to 

me . " 41 14 

My life, being made of four " 45 7 

speed being made from thee " 50 8 

desire, of perfect'st love being made " 51 10 
Being had, to triumph, being laok'd, 

to hope " 52 14 
winter, which, being full of care " 56 13 
Being your slave " 57 1 
Beiug your vassal " 58 4 
being at your beck " 58 5 
wherewith being crown'd " 60 6 
being woo'd of time " 70 6 
or victor being charged " 70 10 
my body being dead " 74 10 
Or, being wreck'd " 80 11 
tongues to be your being shall re- 
hearse " 81 11 
you yourself, being extant " 83 6 
my glory, being dumb " 83 10 
beauty being mute " 83 11 
Being fond on praise " 84 14 
being best acquainted " 88 5 
As thou being mine " 96 14 
my mind, being crown'd with you " 114 1 
Even so, being full of your ne'er- 
cloying sweetness " 118 5 
When not to be receives reproach 

of being " 121 2 

for I, being pent in thee " 133 13 

so thou, being rich in ' Will " 135 11 

But being both from me " 144 11 

he again desires her, being sat L C 66 

nor being desired yielded " 149 



BEING 



41 



BEST 



Being — you o'er me .... strong L C 257 

For being both to me PP 2 11 

Thou being a goddess "36 

Thy grace being gain'd "38 

Beldam — 

To show the daughters R L 953 

shapes her sorrow to the beldam's 
woes " 1458 

Belied — the picture was ... . " 1533 

As any she belied with false com- 
pare Son 130 14 
not be so, nor thou belied " 140 13 

Believe — Not to , and yet VA 986 

Who will believe my verse Son 17 1 

And then believe me " 21 10 

Never believe though in my nature " 109 9 
I do believe her " 138 2 

I do believe her P P 1 2 

Believed — by mad ears .... be Son 140 12 
Believed her eyes when they to as- 
sail L C 262 

Believing — she is dead VA 467 

hard-believing love " 985 

Bell — that hears the passing-bell " 702 

as fowl hear falcon's bells R L 511 

like a heavy-hanging bell " 1493 

the sui-ly sullen bell Son 71 2 

My wether's bell rings doleful knellPP 18 28 

Belly— He on her .... falls VA 594 

Belong— 

danger to resistance did .... R L 1265 

belongs to love's fine wit Son 23 14 
to you it doth belong " 58 11 
to thee I so belong " 88 13 
better state to me belongs " 92 7 
bosoms that to me belong L C 254 

Beloved — 

Where her .... Collatinus lies R L 256 

thou art beloved of many Son 10 3 

that love and am beloved " 25 13 

Thy sweet beloved name " 89 10 

Nor my beloved as an idol shew " 105 2 

1 to be beloved of thee " 150 14 
Below— to the ground VA 923 

Coucheth the fowl below with his 

wings' shade R L 507 

Belt— A of straw and ivy buds P P 20 13 

Bemoaned — fore-bemoaned moan Son 30 11 

Bend — He bends her fingers VA 476 

woodman that doth bend his bow R L 580 

Or bends with the remover Son 116 4 

Bending— from his .... crest V A 395 

bending all my loving thoughts Son 88 10 
Within his bending sickle's com- 
pass come " 116 10 

Benefit- the of rest " 28 2 

O benefit of ill " 119 9 

Bent— butcher, to kill V A ..... 618 

The world is bent my deeds to cross Son 90 2 
whose busy care is bent " 143 6 

Which, not to anger bent P P 5 12 

What though her frowning brows 

be bent " 19 13 

If to women he be bent " 21 45 

Bepainted— all with red V A 901 

Beqneath— not to their lot R L 534 

to Tarquin I'll bequeath " 1181 

I'll bequeath unto the knife " 1184 

shall I bequeath to thee " 1192 



Bequeath— thou didst to me P P 10 12 

Bequeathed — unto the clouds .... R L 1727 

Bequest — 

Nature's .... gives nothing Son 4 3 

Bereave — stains and soon bereaves V A 797 

Hushing from forth a cloud be- 
reaves our sight R L 373 

Bereft— I am .... him so VA .. .. 381 

sense of feeling were bereft me " 439 

From me by strong assault it is 

bereft R L 835 

Beauty's effect with beauty were 

bereft Son 5 11 

Berry — Or as the .... breaks VA 460 

that helpless berries saw " 604 

they him with berries " 1104 

Beseech — I heartily .... thee " 404 

Beseech'd — 

acceptance weepingly beseech'd L C 207 

Beseecher — no fair beseechers kill Son 135 13 

Beseem — 

deep regard beseems the sage R L 277 

as well beseem thy heart Son 132 10 

Beset — she is dreadfully .... R L 444 

Beshrew — Beshrew that heart Son 133 1 

Beside — falls an orient drop .... V A 981 

my added praise beside Son 103 4 

her pale and pined cheek beside L C 32 

and to no love beside " 77 

Besides — his soul's fair temple R L 719 

Besides, of weariness he did com- 
plain him " 845 

Besides, the life and feeling " 1317 

Who with his fear is put besides 

his part Son 23 2 
all the world besides methinks are 

dead " 112 14 

Besiege — When forty winters shall 

.... thy brow Son 2 1 

besiege all kinds of blood " 109 10 

Till thus he 'gan besiege me L C 177 

Besieged — From the Ardea R L 1 

the walls of strong-besieged Troy " 1429 

Besmeared — 

besmear'd with sluttish time Son 55 4 

Best — red, she loves him .... V A 77 

Her best is better'd " 78 

But then woos best " 570 

desire sees best of all " 720 

Since her best work " 954 

best become her grief " 968 

But none is best " 971 

They that love best " 1164 

Grief best is pleased with grief's 

society R L 1111 

shall fit the trespass best " 1613 

Look, whom she best endow'd Son 11 11 

perspective it is best painter's art " 24 4 

what is best, that best I wish in thee " 37 13 

then do mine eyes best see " 43 1 

Thou, best of dearest " 48 7 

Shall Time's best jewel " 65 10 

best to be with you alone " 75 7 
So all my best is dressing old words 

new " 76 11 

being best acquainted " 88 5 

I better in one general best " 91 8 

But best is best, if never intermix'd " 101 8 

of sweet beauty's best " 106 5 



BEST 



42 



BIDE 



Best — proved thee my best of love Son 110 8 
next my heaven the best " 110 13 

Creating every bad a perfect best " 114 7 
Now I love you best " 115 10 

Yet what the best is " 137 4 

my days are past the best "138 6 

O, love's best habit " 138 11 

When all my best doth worship " 149 11 
thy worst all best exceeds " 150 8 

If best were as it was, or best 

'without LC 98 

' as it best deceives " 306 

my years be past the best P P 1 6 

O, love's best habit " 1 11 

Bad in the best " 7 18 

Bestow — all naked, will bestow it Son 26 8 

in more pleasures to bestow them L C 139 

Bestow' d — The kiss I gave you is be- 

stow'd in vain V A 771 

0, that sad breath his spongy lungs 

bestow'd L C 326 

Bestow'st — which youngly thou .... .So?i 11 3 
Betake — every one to rest themselves 

betake B L 125 

oft betake him to retire " 175 

to singing he betakes P P 8 12 

Betliiiiking — with false .... grieves V A 1024 

Betokeii'd — that ever yet betoken'd " 453 

Betray — himself confounds, betrays P i 160 

to betray my life " 233 

thine eyes betray thee unto mine " 483 

might the stern wolf betray Son 96 9 

betraying me, I do betray " 151 5 

betray the fore-betray'd L C 328 

Betray'd—Betray'd the hours RL 933 

Betraying — . . . . me, I do betray Son 151 5 

Better — Are better proof VA 626 

his beauty may the better thrive " 1011 

While thou on Tereus descant'st 

better skill It L 1134 

which of the twain were better " 1154 

the better so to clear her " 1320 

might become them better " 1323 

in ranks of better equipage Son 32 12 

and poets better prove " 32 13 

all the better part of me " 39 2 

or whether better they " 59 11 

the better part of me " 74 8 

Knowing a better spirit " 80 2 

might be better used " 82 13 

on better judgement making " 87 12 

these I better in one general best " 91 8 
Thy love is better " 91 9 

I see a better state " 92 7 

That did not better for my life pro- 
vide " 111 3 
That better is by evil still made 

better " 119 10 

'Tis better to be vile than vile es- 
teemed " 121 1 
Better becomes the grey cheeks " 132 6 
teach thee wit, better it were " 140 5 
The better angel is a man right fair " 144 . 3 
Tempteth my better angel " 144 6 
My better angel is a man right fair P P ■ 2 8 
Tempteth my better angel "26 

Better'd— Her best is better'd VA 78 

Then better'd that the world Son 75 8 

Bettering — with the of the time " 32 5 



Bettering — 

stamp of the time-bettering days Son 82 8 

Betuni bled— from her couch R L 1037 

Between — And, lo, I lie between that 

sun and thee V A 194 

Between this heavenly and earthly 

sun ' " 198 

a war of looks was then between 

them " 355 

lest between them both it should R L 74 

between desire and dread " 171 

'Tween frozen conscience and hot- 
burning will " 247 

between her chamber and his will " 302 

Between whose hills " 390 

As if between them twain " 405 

Between each kiss P P 1 8 

So between them love did shine P T 33 

Betwixt— 

'Twixt crimson shame and anger V A 76 

'twixt the son and sire " 1160 

Betwixt mine eye and heart Son 47 1 

As 'twixt a miser and his wealth " 75 4 

As oft 'twixt May and April L C 102 

must the love be great 'twixt thee 
and me PP 8 3 
Bevel- 
though they themselves be bevel Son 121 11 
Bewailed — Lest my bewailed guilt " 36 10 

Beware — Hadst thou but bid beware l'^4 943 

Beweej) — beweep my outcast state Son 29 2 
Bcwitch'd — bewitch'd withlust'sfoul 

charm R L 173 

Consents bewitch'd, ere he desire L C 131 

Bewitcliing — Bewitching like the 

wanton mermaid's song V A ... . 777 

Bewray'd — the hateful foe bewray'dP L 1698 

To hear her secrets so bewray'd P P 19 54 
Bey Olid — Devise extremes beyond ex- 
tremity R L ..... 969 
Beyond all date Son 122 4 
Bias — Study his bias leaves P P 5 5 

Bid — Bid me discourse V A 145 

To bid the wind a base " 303 

And bid Suspicion " 448 

and bid good night " 534 

Bids him farewell " 580 

bid them leave quaking, bids them 

fear no more " 899 

thou but bid beware " 943 

They bid thee crop " 946 

bids her rejoice " 977 

Who bids them still " 1041 

and bids them do their liking RL 434 

And bids her eyes hereafter still be 

blind " 758 

bids it leap from thence " 760 

bid fair Lucrece speak " 1268 

Bid thou be ready " 1292 

Bid him with speed " 1294 

And bids Lucretius give " 1773 

shame bids him possess his breath " 1777 

to the painted banquet bids my 

heart Son 47 6 

bid your servant once adieu " 57 8 
Bidding — Bidding them find their 

sepulchres L C 46 

Bide— 

tame to sufferance, bide each check ;Sora 53 7 



BIDE 



43 



BLEED 



Bide— 

my o'er-press'd defence can bide Son 139 8 
Some in her threadeu fillet still did 

bide i C 33 

Biding — 

pitchy vapours from their biding R L 550 

Bier — Borne on the bier with white Son 12 8 

Big- 
autumn, big with rich increase " 97 6 
Big discontent so breaking L C 56 

Bill — That some would sing, some 

other in their bills VA 1102 

Billing' — doves that sit a-billing " 366 

Bin— I their father had not bin R L 210 

Bind— 

bond that him as fast doth bind Son 134 8 

Bird — Look how a bird lies V A 67 

woe unto the birds " 455 

birds to their nest ' " 532 

Like a wild bird " 560 

Even as poor birds " 601 

birds that helpless berries sa* " 60-t 

the birds such pleasure " 1101 

Birds never limed It L 88 

give the sneaped birds more cause 

to sing " 333 

like to a new-kill'd bird " 457 

where the sweet birds sing " 871 

The little birds that tune " 1107 

'You mocking birds,' quoth she " 1121 

And for, poor bird, thou sing'st " 1142 

choirs, where late the sweet birds 

sang Son 73 4 

The very birds are mute " 97 12 

Yet nor the lays of birds " 98 5 

Of bird, of flower, or shape " 113 6 

Sweet birds sing not P P 18 38 

Melodious birds sing madrigals " 20 8 

and birds did sing " 21 5 

She, poor bird, as all forlorn " 21 9 

All thy fellow birds do sing " 21 25 

Even so, poor bird, like thee " 21 27 

Let the bird of loudest lay P T 1 

For these dead birds sigh a prayer " 67 

Birth — A dearer birth than this Son 32 11 

birth, or wealth, or wit " 37 5 

Showing their birth " 76 8 

Some glory in their bii'th " 91 1 

better than high birth to me " 91 9 

Birtli-honr — or birth-hour's blot R L 537 

Bit— The iron bit he crusheth VA 269 

Bite — and bites the poor flies " 316 

Bitter — to bitter wormwood taste RL 893 

And bitter words to ban " 1460 

that I will bitter think Son 111 11 
To bitter sauces did I frame my 

feeding " us 6 

Bitterness — ^Nor think the bitterness 

of absence sour " 57 7 

No bitterness that I will " 111 11 

Blab — Never can blab VA 126 

Black — And coal-black clouds " 533 

mourner, black and grim " 920 

black chaos comes again " 1020 

with so black a deed R L 226 

With such black payment " 576 

Black lust, dishonour, shame " 654 

Black stage for tragedies and mur- 
ders fell " 766 



Black — Through Night's black bo- 
som should not peep again R L 788 

underneath thy black all-hidiag 

cloak " 801 

bathe his coal-black wings " 1009 

changed to black iu every vein " 1454 

Lucrece clad in mourning black " 1585 

And some look'd black " 1743 

Of that black blood " 1745 

Makes black night beauteous Son 27 12 

in these black lines be seen " 63 13 

That iu black ink my love may still 

shine bright " Go 14 

black night doth take away " 73 7 

black was not counted fair " 127 1 

But now is black beauty's successive 

heir " 127 3 

my mistress' eyes are raven black " 127 9 
black wires grow on her head " 130 4 

Thy black is fairest " 131 12 

In nothing art thou black " 131 13 

Have put on black, and loving 

mourners be " 132 3 

beauty herself is black " 132 13 

Who art as black as hell " 147 14 

more black and damned here L C 54 

In black mourn I P P 18 19 

Blackest — The .... sin is clear'd R L 354 

Black-fiiced — by this night VA 773 

but when a black-faced cloud R L 547 

such black-faced storms " 1518 

Blade- 
he shakes aloft his Roman blade " 505 

Blame — blames her miss V A 53 

blotting it with blame " 796 

Death is not to blame " 992 

bear an ever-during blame R L 224 

warrant for blame " 620 

nurse of blame " 767 

Is worthy blame " 1257 

those proud lords to blame " 12.59 

The more to blame my sluggard 

negligence " 1278 

every eye beholds their blame " 1343 

I cannot blame thee So7i 40 6 

Not blame your pleasure " 58 14 

O, blame me not " 103 5 

bloody, full of blame " 129 3 

Let reason rule things worthy 

blame PP 19 3 

Blamed — ^But yet be blamed Son 40 7 

That thou art blamed " 70 1 

Blank — Commit to these waste blanks " 77 10 

Blast—Thy hasty spring still blasts R L 49 

Unruly blasts wait " 869 

before the northern blast " 1335 

Blasted— Bud, and be blasted VA 1142 

Blasting — of many a blasting hour LC 72 

Blaze — fiery eyes blaze forth her 

wrong VA 219 

Blazed — red fires in both their faces 

blazed R L 1353 

Blazon-^in the blazon of sweet beau- 
ty's best Son 106 5 

Blazon'd— With wit well blazon'd L C 217 

Bleed — make my faint heart bleed V A 669 

seem'd with him to bleed " 1056 

my false heart bleed RL 228 

every tear he falls a Trojan bleeds " 1551 



BLEED 



44 



BLOT 



Bleed— that beholds her bleed RL 1732 

by whom thy fair wife bleeds " 1824 

Bleeding — bleeding as they go V A 924 

bleeding under Pyrrhus' proud 

foot R L 1440 

key-cold Lucrece' bleeding stream " 1774 

To shew her bleeding body " 1851 

Of proofs new-bleeding L C 153 

with bleeding groans they pine " 275 

Heart is bleeding PP 18 23 

Bleniisli — The blemish that will nev- 
er be forgot R L 536 

I spied in her some blemish " 1358 

Bleniisli'd — If in this blemish'd fort " 1175 

So beauty blemish'd once 's for ever 

lost PP 13 11 

Blench — These blenches gave my 

heart Son 110 7 

Blend — sapphire and the opal blend L C 215 

Bless — and never did he bless VA 1119 

Naming thy name blesses an ill re- 
port Son 95 8 

Blessed — But blessed bankrupt VA 466 

from the blessed thing he sought R L 340 

this blessed league to kill " 383 

To hold their cursed-blessed fortune " 866 

With means more blessed than my 

barren rhyme So7i 16 4 

mine eyes be blessed made " 43 9 

the rich, whose blessed key " 52 1 

Blessed are you whose worthiness " 52 13 

in every blessed shape we know " 53 12 
it hath thought itself so blessed 

never " 119 6 

upon that blessed wood " 128 2 

Blessed-fiiir— But what's so " 92 13 

Blessing:- — blessing every book " 82 4 
to your beauteous blessings add a 

■ curse , " 84 13 

Blest — by pleading may be blest VA 328 

more blest than living lips Son 52 11 

more blest may be the view " 56 12 

some special instant special blest " 128 12 

Blind — But blind they are, and keep 

themselves R L 378 

in blind concealing night " 675 

her eyes hereafter still be blind " 758 

Blind, muffled bawd " 768 

The poor, lame, blind " 902 

■which the blind do see Son Tl 8 

and is partly blind " 113 3 

Swear to thy blind soul " 136 2 

Thou blind fool, Love " 137 1 

with tears thou keep'st me blind " 148 13 

thou lovest, and I am blind " 149 14 

Blinded — with a greater light R L 375 

Blindfold— With blindfold fury VA 554 

Blindness — gave eyes to blindness Son 152 11 

Bliss — to want his bUss R L ..... 389 

A bliss in proof Son 129 11 

Blood — her blood doth boil VA 555 

Whose blood upon " 665 

heating of the blood " 742 

Like milk and blood " 902 

But stole his blood " 1056 

his congealed blood " 1122 

his blood, that on the ground " 1167 

pale cheeks and the blood " 1169 

in my breast as in his blood " 1182 



Blood— 

Thou art the nest of blood R L 1184 

to stain the ocean of thy blood " 655 

such wretched blood should spill " 999 

my foul-defiled blood " 1029 

My stained blood to Tarquin " 1181 

My blood shall wash " 1207 

Ere she with blood had stain'd " 1316 

the blood his cheeks replenish " 1357 

The red blood reek'd " 1377 

To Simois' reedy banks the red 

blood ran " 1437 

Her blue blood changed " 1454 

Though my gross blood " 1655 

Her blood in poor revenge " 1736 

that the crimson blood " 1738 

Some of her blood still pure and red 

remain'd " 1742 

of that black blood " 1745 

Corrupted blood some watery token 

shows " 1748 

And blood untainted " 1749 

blood so unjustly stain'd " 1836 

And see thy blood warm Son 1 14 

And that fresh blood " 11 3 

burn the long-lived phoenix in her 

blood " 19 4 

When hours have drain'd his blood " 63 3 
Beggar'd of blood to blush through 

lively veins " 67 10 

Where cheeks need blood " 82 14 

besiege all kinds of blood " 109 10 

to my sportive blood " 121 6 

sadly peun'd in blood L C 47 

O false blood, thou register of lies " 52 

satisfaction to our blood " 162 

Are errors of the blood " 184 

and rubies red as blood " 198 

Bloodless — by doubt and .... fear V A 891 

takes her by the bloodless hand R L 1597 

In bloodless white X C 201 

Bloody— the boar, that beast VA 999 

So, at his bloody view " 1037 

In bloody death R L 430 

Here friend by friend in bloody 

channel lies " 1487 

My bloody judge forbade " 1648 

and by this bloody knife " 1840 

upon this bloody tyrant. Time Son 16 2 
The bloody spur cannot provoke 

him on " 50 9 

bloody, full of blame " 129 3 

vanquish'd men in bloody fight P P 18 36 

Bloom — The canker-blooms have full 

as deep Son 54 5 

Blossom — made the blossoms dote L C 235 

Spied a blossom passing fair P P VI 3 

Blot— when they blot the sky VA 184 

die, unhallow'd thoughts, before 
you blot R L ..... 192 

a slavish wipe or birth-hour's blot " 537 

To blot old books and alter their 

contents " 948 

To shun this blot she would not 

blot the letter " 1322 

Or blot with hell-born sin " ._.... 1519 

when clouds do blot the heaven Son 28 10 
So shall those blots that do with me 
remain " 36 3 



BLOT 



45 



BOLD 



Blot — But what's so blessed-fair that 

fears uo blot Son 92 13 

beauty's veil doth cover every blot " 95 11 

Blotted — What wit sets down is blot- 
ted straight with will R L 1299 

Blotting— blotting it with blame VA 796 

Blow — bear such shameful blows R L 832 

that blow did bail it " 1725 

to give thyself a blow " 1823 

Under the blow of thralled discon- 
tent Son 124 7 

Blow — To fan and blow them dry V A 52 

wind would blow it off " 1089 

And blows the smoke R L 312 

blows these pitchy vapours " 550 

From lips new-waxen pale begins 

to blow " 1663 

till it blow up rain " 1788 

thy cheeks may blow P P 17 9 

Blow'st— Thou blow'st the fire R L 884 

Blown — The tempting tune is ... . V A 778 

Their light blown out " 826 

My sighs are blown away " 1071 

Small lights are soon blown out R L 647 

sorrow ebbs, being blown with wind 
of words " 1330 

Blue — Her two blue windows V A 482 

globes circled with blue R L 407 

Whose ranks of blue veins " 440 

Her blue blood changed " 1454 

Blue circles stream'd like rainbows " 1587 

Blue-vein'd — These .... violets VA 125 

BIunt^But the blunt boar " 884 

this blunt and ill R L 1300 

blunt rage and rigour roll'd " 1398 

with the blunt swain he goes " 1504 

Devouring Time, blunt thou the 

lion's paws Son 19 1 

That over-goes my blunt invention 

quite " 103 7 

blunt the sharp'st intents " 115 7 

Blunter — Thy edge should blunter 

be than appetite " 56 2 

Blunting- — For .... the fine point " 52 4 
By blunting us to make our wits 
more keen L C 161 

Blur— This blur to youth RL 222 

Blurr'd — Thy issue blurr'd with 

nameless bastardy " 52 

Blush- 
Forgetting shame's pure blush VA 558 

beauty would blush for shame R L 54 

when beauty boasted blushes " 55 

the red rose blush at her own dis- 
grace " 479 

I have no one to blush with me " 792 

to blush through lively veins Son 67 10 

Of grief and blushes L C 200 

Of burning blushes " ..... 304 

To blush at speeches rank " 807 

Yet will she blush P P 19 53 

Blush'd- Who blush'd and pouted VA 33 

he blush'd to see her shame R L 1344 

She thought he blush'd " 1354 

Bliisliiug — spread upon the .... rose V A 590 

when, lo, the blushing morrow RL 1082 

And blushing on her " 1339 

And blushing with him " 1355 

That blushing red " 1511 



Blushing— Blushing at that R L 1750 

One blushing shame Son 99 9 

by thee blushing stand " 128 8 

And blushing fled P P 9 14 

Blusterer — Sometime a blusterer L O 58 

Blustering — stormy weather RL 115 

Boar — Unless it be a boar VA 410 

To hunt the boar " 588 

'The boar!' quoth she " 589 

wouldst hunt the boar " 614 

thou didst name the boar " 641 

an angry-chafing boar " 662 

with the boar to-morrow " 672 

the hunting of the boar " 711 

But the blunt boar " 884 

spied the hunted boar " 900 

to rate the boar " 903 

the boar, that bloody beast " 999 

the boar provoked " 1003 

The foul boar's conquest " 1030 

that the boar had trench'd " 1052 

urchin-snouted boar " 1105 

He ran upon the boar " 1112 

deep-wounded with a boar P P 9 10 

Boast — Perchance his boast R L 36 

My resolution, love, shall be thy 

boast " 1193 

in that my boast is true L C 246 

Boast — What canst thou boast V A 1077 

He shall not boast R L 1063 

and proud titles boast Son 25 2 

to boast how I do love thee " 26 13 
Asvictorsof my silence cannot boast " 86 11 

of all men's pride I boast " 91 12 

Time, thou shalt not boast " 123 1 

Boasted — When beauty .... blushes R L 55 

Boat — I am a worthless boat Son 80 11 

Boding — My boding heart pants V A 647 

wolves' death-boding cries R L 165 

Body— 

my body's bane would cure thee V A 372 

What is thy body but a swallowing 

grave " 757 

The strongest body shall it make 

most weak " 1145 

But with my body R L 1157 

My body or my soul " 1163 

That wounds my body " 1185 

My soul and body " 1199 

through all her body spread " 1266 

cannot abuse a body dead " 1267 

imprison'd in a body dead " 1456 

Her body's stain " 1710 

Himself on her self-slaughter'd 

body threw " 1733 

Circles her body in on every side " 1739 

To show her bleeding body " 1851 

My body is the frame Son 24 3 

when body's works expired " 27 4 
My name be buried where my body is" 72 11 

ray body being dead " 74 10 

some in their body's force " 91 2 

is this thy body's end " 146 8 

to my gross body's treason " 151 6 

My soul doth tell my body " 151 7 

Boil — her blood doth boil V A 555 

Boisterous — .... and unruly beast " .326 

Bold— Be bold to play " 124 

dares not be so bold " 401 



BOLD 



46 



BOTH 



Bold— with hold, stern looks B L 1252 

if your maid may be so bold " 1282 

life and bold audacity " 1346 

bold Hector, march'd to field " 1430 

to flatter fools and make them hold " 1559 

to give them from me was I bold Son 122 11 
I dare not be so bold " 131 7 

Youth is hot and bold PP 12 7 

Bold-faced— like a bold-faced suitor VA 6 

Boldness — At the wood's boldness Son 128 8 
BoU'ii — one being throng'd bears 

back, all boll'n and red RL 1417 

Bond — unloose it from their bond " 136 

My bonds in thee Son 87 4 

Whereto all bonds do tie me " 117 4 

Under that bond " 134 8 

seal'd false bonds of love " 142 7 

vow, bond, nor space L C 264 

to that strong-bonded oath " 279 

Bondage- 
He held such petty in disdain VA 394 

And, true to bondage L C 34 

Bone — on feathers, flesh, and bone VA 56 

colour, pace, and bone " 294 

Shall curse my bones R L 209 

my bones with dust shall cover Son 32 2 

a ring of posied gold and bone L C 45 

Boned — 

Shows me a bare-boned death R L 1761 

Bonnet — And with his bonnet V A 339 

Bonnet nor veil henceforth no crea- 
ture wear " 1081 

he put his bonnet on " 1087 

Book — margents of such books R L 102 

the school, the book " 615 

To blot old books and alter their 

contents " 9-18 

To cipher what is writ in learned 

books " 811 

women's faces are their own faults' 

books " 1253 

0, let my books be then the elo- 
quence Son 23 9 
Is from the book of honour razed " 25 11 
in some antique book " 59 7 
And of this book this learning " 77 4 
and much enrich thy book " 77 14 
blessing every book " 82 4 
makes his book thine eyes P P 5 5 
Book—Boo\i both my wilfulness and 

errors down Son 117 9 

Boot— And 'Will' to boot " 135 2 

Bootless — 

this idle theme, this bootless chat VA 422 

trouble deaf heaven with my boot- 
less cries Son 29 3 
Bore — I bore the canopy " 125 1 
it bore not beauty's name " 127 2 

our drops this difference bore L C 300 

Born — mine honour is new-born R L 1190 

or blot with hell-boru sm " 1519 

my old age new born " 1759 

With April's first-born flowers Son 21 7 
As to behold desert a beggar born " 66 2 
Before these bastard signs of fair 

were boru " 68 3 

is thine and born of thee " 78 10 

Ere you were boru " 104 14 

born to our desire " 123 7 



Born — who, not born fair Son 127 11 

conscience is born of love " 151 2 

Borne — borne so hard a mind V A .. . . 203 

Borne by the trustless wings R L 2 

Borne on the bier with white and So7i 12 8 
by me be borne alone " 36 4 

Borrow — 'Tis much to borrow V A 411 

shining star doth borrow " 861 

tears did lend and borrow " 961 

eyes that light will borrow R L 1083 

she their looks doth borrow " 1498 

good day, of night now borrow R JP 15 17 

Borrow'd — 

they borrow'd all their shine VA 488 

That to his borrow'd bed he make 

retire R L 573 

To see those borrow'd tears " 1549 

with art's false borrow'd face Son 127 6 

Which borrow'd from this holy fire 

of love " 153 5 
O, all that borrow'd motion L C 327 

Bosom — From his soft bosom V A 81 

Within my bosom " 646 

of her bosom dropp'd " 958 

within her bosom " 1173 

Through Kigbt's black bosom R L 7S8 

But they whose guilt within their 

bosoms lie " 1342 

in that bosom sits Son 9 13 

AVhich in my bosom's shop " 24 7 

Thy bosom is endeared " 31 1 

salve which wounded bosoms fits " 120 12 
in thy steel bosom's ward " 133 9 

he did in the general bosom reign L C 127 

The broken bosoms that to me be- 
long " 254 

Both — Both favour, savour VA 747 

mingled both together " 902 

Both crystals, where they " 963 

both of them extremes " 987 

Could rule them botli " 1008 

They both would strive " 1092 

Which of them both R L 53 

lest between them both " 74 

Both which, as servitors " 285 

and all the power of both " 572 

tutor both to good and bad " 995 

Kill both thyself and her " 1036 

both were kej)t for heaven " 1166 

Thou dead, both die, and both shall 

victors be " 1211 

in both their faces blazed " 1353 

And both she thinks too long " 1572 

Both stood, like old acquaintance " 1595 

stain both moon and sun Son 35 3 

Both find each other, and I lose both 

twain " 42 11 

And both for my sake " 42 12 

can jump both sea and land " 44 7 

Are both with thee " 45 2 

Than both your poets " 83 14 

Both grace and faults " 96 3 

had stol'n of both " 99 10 

both skill and argument " 100 8 

Both truth and beauty " 101 3 

Book both my wilfulness and errors 

down " 117 9 

Thy registers and thee I both defy " 123 9 
thou hast both him and me " 134 13 



BOTH 



47 



BREAK 



Botli— On both sides thus is simple 

truth suiipress'd Son 138 8 

But being both from me, both to 

each friend " 144 11 

of all sizes both high and low L C 21 

and sexes both enchanted " 128 

Both fire from hence " 294 

nature is both kind and tame " 311 

both to me, both to each friend P P 2 11 
One god is god of both " 8 13 

One knight loves both, and both in 

thee remain " S 14 

to turn them both to gain " 16 10 

Thou and I were both beguiled " 21 30 

Bottom — 

the bottom poison, and the top VA 1143 

search the bottom of annoy R L 1109 

Bottom-grass— Sweet bottom-grass V A 23(5 

Bottomless — 
O, deeper sin than conceit R L 701 

Bough — on a ragged bough V A 37 

Upon those boughs Son 73 3 

music burthens every bough " 102 11 

Bought — thy interest was not .... R L 1067 

Bounced — He, spying her, .... in P P 6 13 

Bound— The sea hath bounds VA 389 

What rounds, what bounds L G 109 

Bound — thou art bound to breed V A 171 

in her arms be bound " 226 

he neighs, he bounds " 265 

bound him to her breast " 812 

a wretched image bound R L 1501 

As bound in knighthood " 1697 

bound to stay your leisure Son 58 4 

Bound for the prize " 86 2 

Boundetli— Yet in the eddy RL 1669 

Bounding — the .... banks o'erflows " 1119 

Boundless — 

there falls into thy boundless flood " 653 

nor earth, nor boundless sea Son 65 1 

Bounteous — 
The bounteous largess given thee "46 
which bounteous gift " 11 12 

Bountiful — 
Bountiful they will him call P P 21 40 

Bounty— shouldst in bounty cherish Son 11 12 
as your bounty doth appear " 53 11 
that lets not bounty fall L C 41 

Bow — to the saddle-bow V A 14 

by Cupid's bow she doth protest " 581 

that doth bend his bow R L 580 

Bow — ^in battle ne'er did bow V A 99 

joints forget to bow " 1061 

She bows her head " 1171 

to the ground their knees they bow P i 1846 

make me bow Son 90 3 

under my transgression bow " 120 3 

Bow-back— On his bow-back VA 619 

Bowed — to thee like osiers bowed P P 5 4 
As heaven, it seem'd, to kiss the 
turrets bow'd R L 1372 

Bower — hath no name, no holy .... Son Vll 7 

Boy — was the tender boy V A 32 

cry, flint-hearted boy " 95 

Is love so light, sweet boy " 155 

to the wayward boy " 344 

excuse thy courser, gentle boy " 403 

silly boy, believing she is dead " 467 

' Sweet boy,' she says " 583 



Boy — sweet boy, ere this V A 613 

By this the boy " 1165 

Nothing, sweet boy Son 108 5 

O thou, my lovely boy " 126 1 

The boy for trial " 153 10 

Forbade the boy P P 9 8 

As if the boy should use " 11 8 

Brag — brag not of thy might V A 113 

Nor shall Death brag Son IS 11 

Beauty brag, but 'tis not she P T 63 

Bragg'd — When virtue bragg'd R L 54 

Whose bare out-bragg'd the web L 95 

Braided— his .... hanging mane VA 271 

braided in loose negligence L C 35 

Brain — 

proceedings of a drunken brain VA 910 

disposing of her troubled brain " 1040 

the brain being troubled " 1068 

the weak brain's forgeries R L 460 

how are our brains beguiled Son 59 2 

deliver'd from thy brain " 77 11 

in my brain inhearse " 86 3 

What's in the brain " 108 1 

thy tables are within my brain " 122 1 

so long as brain and heart " 122 5 

Braiu'd — And deep-braiu'd sonnets L C 209 

Brain-sick — by rude desire RL 175 

Brake — brakes obscure and rough V A 237 

brake off his late intent " 469 

fawn hid in some brake " 876 

Here kennel'd in a brake " 913 

Here in these brakes P P 9 10 

Bramble— The thorny brambles VA 629 

Brancli — 

the branches of another root R L 823 

Brand — my name receives a brand Son 111 5 

Cupid laid by his brand " 153 1 

Love's brand new-fired " 153 9 

his heart-inflaming brand " 154 2 

This brand she quenched " 154 9 

Brand — Brand not my forehead R L 1091 

Brass — And brass eternal slave to 

mortal rage Son' 64 4 

Since brass, nor stone " 65 1 

tombs of brass are spent " 107 14 

Unless my nerves were brass " 120 4 

Brave — When their brave hope RL 1430 

And see the brave day Son 12 2 

Save breed, to brave hun. " 12 14 

And wear their brave state " 15 8 

weed out-braves his dignity " 94 12 

Youth like summer brave P P 12 4 

Briivery — Hiding thy bravery Son 34 4 

Braving — Braving compare, disdain- 
fully did sting RL 40 

Brawl — And ban and brawl P P 19 20 

Brawny — his brawny sides VA 625 

Breach — where no breach should be " 1066 

in the breach appears " 1175 

To make the breach R L 469 

The impious breach " 809 

why of two oaths' breach Son 152 5 

Break — her intendments break VA 222 

girths he breaks asunder " 266 

The client breaks " 336 

the berry breaks before " 460 

love breaks through " 576 

breaks the silver rain " 959 

breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes R L 446 



BREAK 



48 



BRIEF 



LC . 

PP 
RL 

VA 



VA 



566 
1239 
1270 
1280 
1440 
1716 
11 



R 



Break — so her accent breaks R L 

or break their hearts " 

on what occasion break " 

stirring ere the break of day " 

to break upon the galled shore " 

as if her heart would break ' " 

at break of day arising Son 29 

through the cloud thou break " 34 

to break a twofold truth " 41 

When I break twenty " 152 

would not break from thence 
Feeling it break 
To break an oath 
Breaker— Or kings be breakers 
Breaketh— Breaketh his rein 
breaketh from the sweet embrace ' 
She wildly breaketh ' 

Breaking— breaking rings a-twain L 

so breaking their contents 
Breast— Broad breast, full eye 
his back, his breast 
incaged in his breast 
shakes thee on my breast 
closure of my breast 
bound him to her breast 
from whose silver breast 
in my breast as in his blood 
here in my breast 
her breasts, like ivory globes 
On her bare breast 
remains upon her breast 
by beating on her breast 
lurk in gentle breasts 
hollow-swelling feather'd breasts 
beaten from her breast 
she sheathed in her harmless breast 
And bubbling from her breast 
he struck his hand upon his breast 
Which in thy breast doth live Son 
of my speaking breast 
Are windows to my breast 
Within the gentle closure of my 

brea'st 
which in thy breast doth lie 

and most most loving breast 

then her breasts are dun 

needs would touch my breast 

to physic your cold breast L C 

What breast so cold " 

Lean'd her breast ui>till a thorn P P 21 

And the turtle's loyal breast P T 

Breath— I'll sigh celestial breath VA 

all but with a breath " 

Comes breath perfumed " 

his breath breatheth " 

Banish'd by thy breath " 

draws up her breath " 

to steal his breath " 

his breath and beauty set " 

to her Adonis' breath " 

A dream, a breath R L 

play'd with her breath " 

unwholesome breaths make sick " 

for passage of her breath " 

made me stop my breath " 

Thin winding breath " 

his breath drinks up again " 

bids him possess his breath " 

When summer's breath Son 54 8 



5 

12 

6 

34 

275 

14 

852 

264 

811 

874 

G 

56 

296 

396 

582 

648 

782 

812 

855 

1182 

1183 

407 

439 

463 

759 

851 

1122 

1563 

1723 

1737 

1842 

7 

10 

11 

11 

4 

14 

3 

10 

259 

292 

10 

57 

189 

414 

444 

474 

510 

929 

934 

935 

1172 

212 

400 

779 

1040 

. 1180 

, 1407 

. 1666 

. 1777 



Breath — summer's honey breath Son 65 5 

Where breath most breathes " 81 14 
Then others for the breath of words 

respect " 85 13 

If not from my love's breath " 99 3 

had annex'd thy breath " 99 11 

Than in the breath " 130 8 

O, that sad breath L C 326 

My vow was breath, and breath a 

vapour is P P 3 9 

as she fetched breath " 11 11 

age's breath is short " 12 5 

Wish'd himself the heaven's breath " 17 8 
With the breath thou givest and 

takest P T ..... 19 
Breathe — 

breathes she forth her spite R L 762 

What he breathes out " 166S 

So long as men can breathe Son 18 13 

While thou dost breathe " 88 2 

Where breath most breathes " 81 14 

When winds breathe sweet L C 103 

Breath'd— 

on thy well-breath'd horse V A 678 

Lust-breathed Tarquin leaves R L 3 

Breathed forth the sound " 1726 

prison where it breathed Son 145 2 

Breatlier— When all the breathers " 81 12 

Breatheth— breatheth in her face VA 62 

his breath breatheth life in her " 474 

Breathing- Untimely breathings R L 1720 

Breathing-while— in a VA 1142 

Breathless — Till . . . . he disjoin'd T'^4 541 

Bred — Which bred more beauty " 70 

but of no woman bred " 214 

than civil home-bred strife " 764 

in Tarquin new ambition bred R L 411 

By thy bright beauty was it newly 

bred " 490 

errors by opinion bred " 937 

shall my fame be bred " 1188 

conceit of love there bred Son 108 13 

strongly in my purpose bred " 112 13 

Breed — thou art bound to breed VA 171 

breeds by heating of the blood " 742 

would breed a scarcity " 753 

what sorrow I shall breed R L 499 

joy breeds months of pain " 690 

What virtue breeds " 872 

while infection breeds " 907 

breeds the fat earth's store " 1837 

That's for thyself to breed another 

thee Son 6 7 

Save breed to brave him " 12 14 

which public manners breeds " 111 4 

My ewes breed not P P 18 2 

Breeder— Of the fair breeder VA 282 

unback'd breeder, full of fear " 320 

Breedeth— beauty breedeth beauty " 167 

breedeth love by smelling " 444 

Breeding— A breeding jennet " 260 

this bate-breeding spy " 655 

Bribed— hath she the Destinies " 733 

Bridle— The studded bridle " 37 

Brief— This brief abridgement R L 1198 

though my words are brief " 1309 

Nor can I fortune to brief minutes 

tell Son 14 5 

with his brief hours and weeks " 110 11 



BRIEF 



49 



BUD 



Brief— Our dates are brief Son 123 5 
In brief the grounds and motives 

of her woe L C 63 

Brier — Each envious brier V A 705 

Bright — grey, and bright, and quick " 140 

And as the bright sun " 485 

a bright star shooteth " 815 

that makes him bright " 862 

as bright as heaven's beauties R L 13 

that slie reflects so bright " 376 

By thy bright beauty " 490 

pearl from her bright eyes " 1213 

their youthful sons bright weapons 

wield " 1432 

Like bright things stain'd " 1435 

Troy had been bright " 1491 

Into so bright a day " 1518 

to thine own bright eyes Son 1 5 

An eye more bright " 20 5 

though not so bright " 21 11 

to please him thou art bright " 28 9 

darkly bright are bright in dark " 43 4 

shadows doth make bright " 43 5 

And nights bright days " 43 14 

you shall shine more bright " 55 3 

my love may still shine bright " 65 14 

and thought thee bright " 147 13 

Bright orient pearl P P 10 3 

Brighter — Brighter than glass "73 

Brightness — And swear that bright- 
ness doth not grace Son 150 4 

Brim — Under whose brim V A 1088 

on the brook's green brim PP 6 10 

Brine — with showers of silver brine P i 796 

the silken figures in the brine L C 17 

Bring — sometime false doth bring VA 658 

brings beauty under " 746 

Would bring liim mulberries " 1103 

my attempt will bring R L 491 

And bring him where his suit " 898 

and bring truth to light " 940 

Brings home his lord " 1584 

thy sweet love remember'd such 

wealth brings Son 29 13 
For to thy sensual fault I bring in 

sense " 35 9 
let him bring forth " 38 11 
to mine own self bring " 39 3 
Can bring him to liis sweet up- 
locked treasure " 52 2 
by that which I bring forth " 72 13 
give life and bring a tomb " 83 12 
my Muse brings forth " 103 1 
bring water for my stain " 109 8 
Bring me within the level " 117 11 
Green plants bring not PP 18 39 

Brinish — And wiped the .... pearl R L 1213 

With brinish current L C 284 

Bristle — with hairy bristles armed VA 625 

Bristly— Of bristly pikes " 620 

with white and bristly beard Son 12 8 

Brittle— yet, as glass is, brittle PP 7 3 

A brittle glass that's broken " 13 4 

Broad— Broad breast, full eye VA 296 

broad buttock, tender hide " 298 

On your broad main Son 80 8 

Broil — And broils root out " 55 6 

Broke — feather'd creatures .... away " 143 2 

In act thy bed-vow broke " 152 3 
4 



Broke — Vows for thee broke P P 3 4 

If by me broke " 3 13 

Broken — with lustful language .... VA 47 

Poor broken glass RL 1758 

my slumbers should be broken Son 61 3 

The broken bosoms L C 254 

If broken, then it is no fault P P 3 12 

tliat's broken presently " 13 4 

broken dead within an hour " 13 6 

As broken glass no cement can re- 
dress " 13 10 

Broker — 
were ever brokers to defiling L C 173 

Brood— all that brood to kill RL 627 

devour her own sweet brood Son 19 2 

Brook — his shadow in the brook VA 162 

his shadow in the brook " 1099 

sitting by a brook P P 4 1 

growing by a brook "65 

A brook where Adon "66 

on the brook's green brim " 6 10 

Brook — brooks not merry guests R L 1125 

Brother — death-worthy in thy ... . " 635 

the sister and tlie brother P P 8 2 

Brought — 

She had not brought forth thee VA 204 

brought unto his bed R L 120 

fault brought in subjection " 724 

of her own grief brought " 1578 

than this his love had brought Son 32 11 
I would be brought " 44 3 
And brought to medicine " 118 11 
which brought me to her eye L C 247 

Brow — Even so she kiss'd his brow VA 59 

one wrinkle in my brow " 139 

His louring brows " • 183 

hides his angry brow " 839 

with his brows repine " 490 

With heavy eye, knit brow R L 709 

with a cunning brow " 749 

To mask their brows " 794 

character'd in my brow " 807 

A brow unbent " 1509 

shall besiege thy brow Son 2 1 

my love's fair brow "19 9 

splendour on my brow " 33 10 

delves the parallels in beauty's brow " 60 10 
drain'd his blood and fill'd his brow " 63 3 
inhabit on a living brow " 68 4 

of lip, of eye, of brow " 106 6 

stamp'd upon my brow " 112 2 

her frowning brows be bent P P 19 13 

BroAvny — HisbrownylocksdidhangX C 85 

Bruised — 
With bruised arms and wreaths R L 110 

Brutus — from the purple fountain 

Brutus drew " 1734 

Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " 1807 

which Brutus made before " 1847 

Bubbling — And .... from her breast " 1737 

Bud— Who plucks the bud VA 416 

intrude the maiden bud R L 848 

Within thine own bud Son 1 11 

the darling buds of May " 18 3 

loathsome canker lives in sweetest 

bud " 35 4 

their masked buds disclose " 54 8 

For canker vice the sweetest buds 
doth love " 70 7 



BUD 



50 



BUT 



Son 


99 


7 


PP 


10 


2 


" 


20 


13 


VA 




1142 


ML 




604 


PP 


13 


3 


Son 


95 


3 


BL 




467 


VA 




461 


PP 


19 


30 



LC . 



Bud — And buds of marjoram 

Pluck'd in the bud 

A belt of straw and ivy buds 
JSad— Bud, and be blasted 

bud before thy spring 

when first it 'gins to bud 
Budding— of thy budding name 
Bulk — Beating her bulk 
Bullet— deadly bullet of a gun 

The golden bullet beats it down 
Bulwarks — 

for me many bulwarks builded 
Bullded — builded far from accident Son 124 

for me many bulwarks builded L C 

Building — 

To ruinate proud buildings R L 

He of tall building Son 80 
Built — Though weak-built hopes per- 
suade R L 

Of rich-built Ilion " 

when it is built anew Son 119 

built up with newer might " 123 

Burden'd— 

back'd and burden'd being young F^ 419 

Burden-ATise — For I'll hum 

Buried — He might be buried 

their pride lies buried 

which I thought buried 

where buried love doth live 

cost of outworn buried age 

My name be buried 

Truth and beauty buried be 
Buriest — Within thine own bud bur- 



152 

5 

152 

944 

12 

130 

1524 

11 

2 



RL 




1133 


VA 




244 


Son 


25 


7 


" 


31 


4 


" 


31 


9 


" 


64 


2 


" 


72 


11 


PT 




64 



Son 



VA 



BL 



iest content 
Burn — 

He burns with bashful shame 
her fire must burn 
The sun doth burn my face 
If they burn too 
lamp that burns by night 
Do burn themselves 
Fair torch, burn out thy light 
To burn the guiltless casket " 

quench Troy that burns so long " 
fire to burn thy city " 

to burn his Troy with water " 

burn the long-lived phcenix Son 

war's quick fire shall burn " 

full flame should afterwards burn 
clearer " 

Burn'd — in three hot Junes burn'd " 
When he most burn'd L C 

She burn'd with love P P 

She burn'd out love " 

Burnetii— the fire that burneth me VA 
Burneth more hotly 
fire that burneth here 
as soon as straw out-burneth 

Burning — 
maiden burning of his cheeks 
my marrow burning 
With burning eye 
As burning fevers 



RL . 
PP 



VA 



49 

94 

186 

192 

755 

810 

190 

1057 

1468 

1554 

1561 

4 



4 

7 

314 

13 

14 

196 

332 

1475 

14 

50 
142 
178 
739 



conscience and hot-burning will RL 247 

cheers up his burning eye " 435 

burning Troy doth bear " 1474 

Lifts up his burning head Son 7 2 

that burning lungs did raise L C 228 

Of burning blushes " 304 



Burnish'd — hills seem gold VA 

Burnt — two lamps, burnt out, in 

darkness lie " 

burnt out in tedious nights R L 

burnt the shining glory " 

Burtheu — 

he the burthen of a guilty mind " 
burthen of mine own love's might Son 
The second burthen of a former 

child 

wanton burthen of the prime " 
wild music burthens every bough " 

Bury — to bury that posterity V A 

Burying— 

Burs^ng in Lucrece' wound B L 

Bush- 
brambles and embracing bushes V A 
the bushes in the way " 
no secret bushes fear B L 
shape every bush a hideous shape- 
less devil " 

Busy — my thought, my busy care V A 
Busy yourselves in skill-contending 

schools B L 

busy winds give o'er " 

whose busy care is bent Son 

But — but love he laugh'd to scorn V A 

But rather famish " 

seem an hour but short " 

but frosty in desire " 

but soon she stops " 

but never to obey " 

cannot choose but love " 

But when her lips " 

But help she cannot get " 

'Tis but a kiss I beg " 

Touch but my lips " 

there are but twain " 

But having no defects " 

but light, and will aspire " 

shines but warm . " 

but died unkind " 

but speak fair words " 

but the eye alone " 

but of no woman bred " 

But, lo, from forth " 

But when the heart's attorney " 

But now her cheek " 

hut my body's bane " 

but deep desire hath none " 

But when he saw " 

But, when his glutton " 

th(5 lesson is but plain " 

love but to disgrace it " 

all but with a breath " 

Had I no eyes but ears " 

that were but sensible " 

nothing but the very smell " 

But, 0, what banquet " 

But blessed bankrupt " 

But hers, which through " 

But now I lived " 

But now I died " 

But for thy piteous lips " 

but the ungrown fry " 

but dissolves with tempering " 

But then woos best " 

But all in vain " 

But that thou told'st me " 



858 

1128 
1379 
1523 

735 



23 8 

59 4 
97 7 
102 11 
758 



1810 



629 

871 



973 



1018 

1790 

143 6 
4 

20 

23 

36 

46 

61 

79 

89 

93 

96 

115 

123 

138 

150 

193 

204 

208 

213 

214 

259 

335 

347 

372 

389 

393 

399 

407 

412 

414 

..... 433 

436 

441 

445 

466 

491 

497 

498 

504 

526 

565 

570 

607 

614 



BUT 



51 



BUT 



Bnt — ^But having thee at vantage V 
But like an earthquake 
But if thou needs wilt hunt 
But if thou fall 
all is but to rob thee 
But in one minute's fight 
thy body but a swallowing grave 
But gold that's put to use 
But soundly sleeps 
but your device in love 
But Lust's effect 
but more I dare not say 
But idle sounds 
But the blunt boar 
But back retires 
But hatefully at random 
but thy false dart 
thou but bid beware 
But through the flood-gates 
But like a stormy day 
But none is best 
Who is but drunken 
I did but jest 
but is still severe 
I did but act 
■was but late forlorn 
But stole his blood 
But true-sweet beauty 
But when Adonis lived 
But this foul, grim 
But by a kiss 
But he is dead 
but unsavoury end 
but high or low 
but know, it is as good 
But king nor peer H 

O happiness, enjoy'd but of a few 
But some untimely thought 
But beauty, in that white intituled 
But, poorly rich 
But she, that never coped 
they have but less 
Is but to surfeit 
is but to nurse the life 
No noise but owls' and wolves' 

death-boding cries 
But honest fear, bewitch'd 
Or what fond beggar, but to touch 

the crown 
But coward-like with trembling 
But as he is my kinsman 
but she is not her own 
The worst is but denial 
But with a pure appeal 
But, as they open, they all rate 
But his hot heart, which 
But all these poor forbiddings 
But in the midst of his unfruitful 

prayer 
Thoughts are but dreams 
But she, sound sleeping 
But blind they are 
But they must ope 
But that life lived in death 
but mightily he noted 
but strongly he desired 
but she, in worser taking 
But she with vehement prayers 
But as reproof and reason 



635 

648 

673 

721 

723 

746 

757 

768 

786 

789 

800 

805 

848 

884 

906 

940 

, 941 

943 

959 

965 

971 

984 

997 

1000 

1006 

1026 

1056 

1080 

1085 

1105 

1114 

1119 

1138 

1139 

1181 

21 

22 

43 

57 

97 

99 

137 

139 

141 

165 
173 

216 
231 
237 
241 
242 
293 
304 
314 
323 

344 
353 
363 

378 
383 
406 
414 
415 
453 
475 
489 



Butr-But will is deaf RL 495 

But nothing can perfection's course 

control " 500 

But if thou yield " 526 

but his foul appetite " 546 

But when a black-faced cloud " 547 

he doth but dally " 554 

but his heart granteth " 558 

But happy monarchs still are fear'd " 611 

If but for fear of this " 614 

fair reputation but a bawd " 623 

Think but how vile " 631 

but swells the higher by this let " 646 

but alter not his taste " 051 

But low shrubs wither " 665 

But she hath lost " 687 

But her foresight could not forestall " 728 

but that every eye can see " 750 

as he is but Night's child " 785 

But I alone alone must sit " 795 

but he that gives " 833 

But robb'd and ransaek'd " 838 

But no perfection is so absolute " 853 

But like still-pining Tantalus " 858 

But torment that it cannot cure " 861 

But ill-annexed Opportunity " 874 

But they ne'er meet with Opportu- 
nity " 903 

but Sin ne'er gives a fee " 913 

but he was stay'd by thee " 917 

but pitj' not his moans " 977 

But little stars may hide them " 1008 

But if the like the snow-white swan 

desire " 1011 

But eagles gazed upon " 1015 

But if I live " 1033 

But this no slaughterhouse " 1039 

But when I fear'd " 1048 

But thou Shalt know " 1067 

but stol'n from forth thy gate " 1068 

But cloudy Lncrece " 1084 

No object but her passion's strength " 1103 

But with luy body " 1157 

but stoutly say, ' So be it " 1209 

But durst not ask of her " 1223 

But as the earth doth weep " 1226 

No cause, but company " 123G 

But chide rough winter " 1255 

Not that devour'd, but that which 

doth devour " 1256 

But tell me, girl, when went " 1275 

'But, lady, if your maid " 1282 

but not her grief's true quality " 1313 

'Tis but a part of sorrow ^ 1328 

but dull and slow she deems " 1336 

But they whose guilt " 1342 

but do it leisurely ■ " 1349 

but laid no words to gage " 1351 

But long she thinks " 1359 

But the mild glance " 1399 

listening, but with several graces " 1410 

As, but for loss " 1420 

But none where all distress " 1445 

Who nothing wants to answer her 

but cries " 1459 

red nor pale, but mingled so " 1511 

But, like a constant and confirmed 

devil " 1513 

But Tarquin's shape came " 1536 



BUT 



52 



BUT 



But — But such a face should bear B L 1540 

honesty, but yet defiled " 1545 

But now the mindful messenger " 1583 

yieldings, but still pure " 1658 

But, wretched as he is " 1665 

But, ere I name him " 1688 

But she, that yet her sad task " 1699 

But more than ' he " 1718 

But now that fair fresh mirror " 1760 

but through his lips do throng " 1783 

But through his teeth " 1787 

But now he throws that shallow 

habit by " 1814 

But kneel with me and help '' 1830 

But as the riper should by time de- 
cease Son 1 3 
But thou, contracted to thine own "15 

But if thou live " 3 13 

gives nothing, but doth lend "43 

But flowers distill'd " 5 13 

Leese but their show " 5 14 

But when from highmost pitch "79 

They do but sweetly chide thee "87 

Shifts but his place " 9 10 
But beauty's waste hath in the world" 9 11 

But that thou none lovest " 10 4 

but, love, you are " 13 1 

O, none but unthrifts " 13 13 

But not to tell " 14 3 

But from thine eyes " 14 9 

but a little moment " 15 2 

presenteth nought but shows " 15 3 

But wherefore do not you " 16 1 

it is but as a tomb " 17 3 

But were some child of yours " 17 13 

But thy eternal summer " 18 9 

But I forbid thee " 19 8 

but not acquainted " 20 3 

But since she prick'd me out " 20 13 

true in love, but truly write " 21 9 

But when in thee " 22 3 

Is but the seemly raiment " 22 6 

but for thee will " 22 10 

They draw but what they see " 24 14 

But as the marigold " 25 6 

But that I hope " 26 7 

But then begins a journey " 27 3 

But day by night " 28 4 

But day doth daily draw " 28 13 

But if the while I think on thee " 30 13 

But things removed " 31 8 

but this loving thought " 32 9 

But since he died " 32 13 
But, out, alack, he was but one hour 

mine " 33 11 

sorrow lends but weak relief " 34 11 

Ah, but those tears are pearl " 34 13 

there is but one respect " 36 5 

But do not so " 36 13 

but thine shall be the praise " 38 14 

what is't but mine own " 39 4 

But yet be blamed " 40 7 

but yet thou might'st my seat " 41 9 

But here's the joy " 42 13 

then she loves but me alone " 42 14 

But when I sleep " 43 3 

But, ah, thought kills me " 44 9 

But that, so much of earth " 44 11 

But heavy tears, badges of " 44 14 



But— Who even but now come back 
again Son 

but then no longer glad " 
But the defendant doth that plea 

deny " 

But thou, to whom my jewels " 

swift extremity can seem but slow " 

But love, for love " 

And you, but one ' " 

But you like none " 

but fairer we it deem " 

But, for their virtue " 

But you shall shine more bright " 

Which but to-day " 

what should I do but tend " 

But, like a sad slave " 

but that which is " 

stands but for his scythe to mow " 

But when my glass " 

But weep to have " 

But sad mortality " 

but Time decays " 

no exchequer now bulj his " 

But those same tongues " 

But why thy odour " 

slander doth but approve " 

But let your love " 

But be contented " 

The earth can have but earth " 
thou hast but lost the dregs of life " 

thou dost but mend the style " 

But thou art all my art " 

But now my gracious numbers " 
No praise to thee but what in thee 

doth live " 

But since your worth " 

can yield me but a common grave " 

But he that writes of you " 

Let him but copy " 

But that is in my thought " 

But when your countenance " 

but by thy granting " 

but waking no such matter " 

But in the onset come " 

But these particulars " 

But do thy worst " 

But what's so blessed-fair " 

But heaven in thy creation " 

nothing thence but sweetness tell " 

Others but stewards " 

But if that flower " 

but in a kind of praise ". 

But do not so " 

But hope of orphans " 
They were but sweet, but figures of 

delight " 

But, for his theft ' " 

But sweet or colour " 

But best is best " 

then but in the spring " 

But that wild music " 

their praises are but prophecies " 
they look'd but with divining eyes " 

but lack tongues to praise " 

but yet, like prayers divine " 

But makes antiquity " 

but, by all above " 

but efi'ectually is out " 

But reckoning Time " 



45 


11 


45 


13 


46 


7 


48 


5 


51 


6 


51 


12 


53 


4 


53 


14 


54 


3 


54 


9 


55 


3 


56 


3 


57 


1 


57 


11 


59 


1 


60 


12 


62 


9 


64 


14 


65 


2 


65 


8 


67 


11 


69 


6 


69 


13 


70 


5 


71 


12 


74 


1 


74 


7 


74 


9 


78 


11 


78 


13 


79 


3 


79 


12 


80 


5 


81 


7 


84 


7 


84 


9 


So 


11 


86 


13 


87 


5 


87 


14 


90 


11 


91 


7 


92 


1 


92 


13 


93 


9 


93 


12 


94 


8 


94 


11 


95 


7 


96 


13 


97 


10 


98 


11 


99 


12 


99 


15 


101 


8 


102 


5 


102 


11 


106 


9 


106 


11 


106 


14 


108 


5 


108 


12 


110 


6 


113 


4 


115 


5 



BUT 



53 



BY 



Bnt^Bat bears it out Son 116 12 

But shoot not at me " 117 12 

But thence I learn " 118 13 

But that your trespass " 120 13 

but by others' seeing " 121 4 

They are but dressings " 123 4 

love were but the child of state " lS4 1 

But all alone stands " 124 11 

poor but free " 125 10 

But mutual render " 125 12 
She may detain, but not still keep, 

her treasure " 126 10 

But now is black " 127 3 

But is profaned " 127 8 

but despised straight " 129 5 

But no such roses " 130 6 

but thinking on thy face " 131 10 

But slave to slavery " 133 4 

But then my friend's heart " 133 10 

But thou wilt not " 134 5 

He learn'd but surety-like " 134 7 

Think all but one " 135 14 

Make but my name thy love " 136 13 

But wherefore says she not " 138 9 

but with thy tongue " 139 3 

but in my sight " 139 5 

but since I am near slain ' " 139 13 

No news but health " 140 8 

But 'tis my heart that loves " 141 3 

But my five wits " 141 9 

O, but with mine " 142 3 

But if thou catch thy hope " 143 11 

But being both from me " 144 11 

but live in doubt " 144 13 

But when she saw " 145 4 

But, love, hate on " 149 13 

But rising at thy name " 151 9 

But thou art twice forsworn " 152 2 

But why of two oaths' breach " 152 5 

are oaths but to misuse thee " 152 7 

But at my mistress' eye " 153 9 

But found no cure " 153 13 

but in her maiden hand " 154 4 

but I, my mistress' thrall " 154 12 

but, spite of heaven's fell rage L C 13 

but where excess begs all " 42 

Not age, but sorrow " 74 

But, woe is me " 78 

began but to appear " 93 

But quickly on this side " 113 

but were all graced by him " 119 

But, ah, who ever shunn'd " 155 

and words merely but art " 174 

but ne'er was harmed " 194 

but mine own was free " 195 

but fighting outwardly " 203 

But yield them up " 221 

But kept cold distance " 237 

But, my sweet " 239 

But with the inundation " 290 

but an art of craft " 295 

But wherefore says my love P P 1 9 

but live in doubt " 2 13 

but I will prove "35 

none could look but beauty's queen "44 

But whether unripe years "49 

But smile and jest " 4 12 
but not so fair as fickle ,"71 

but neither true nor trusty "72 



Bnt — ^Beauty is but a vain PP 13 1 
take the pain but cannot jjluck the 

pelf " 14 12 

But now are minutes " 15 14 

But one must be refused " 16 9 

But, alas! my hand hath sworn " 17 11 

Juno but an Ethiope were " 17 16 

Plays not at all, but seems afraid " IS 30 

But plainly say thou lovest " 19 11 

But, soft! enough " 19 49 

But if store of crowns be scant " 21 37 

Pity but he were a king " 21 42 

But if Fortune once do frown " 21 47 

But thou shrieking harbinger P T 5 

Had the essence but in one " 26 

But in them it were a wonder " 32 

Truth may seem, but cannot be " 62 

Beauty brag, but 'tis not she " 03 

Butcher— Like to a mortal butcher VA 618 

Butcher-sire — Or . . . .that reaves " 765 

Buttock — broad buttock, tender hide " 298 

to his melting buttock lent " 315 

Buy — So thou wilt buy " 514 

buys my heart from me " 517 

Who buys a minute's mirth R L 213 

They buy thy help " 913 

Buy terms divine " 146 11 

By— eagle, sharp by fast VA 55 

by her fair immortal hand " 80 

by the stern and direful " 98 

By law of nature •' 171 

By this, the love-sick queen " 175 

and by Venus' side " 180 

even by their own direction " 216 

copse that neighbours by " 259 

that is standing by " ?82 

by pleading may be blest " 328 

and by and by " 347 

takes him by the hand " 361 

by touching thee " 438 

breedeth love by smelling " 444 

by his stealing in " 450 

love by looks reviveth " 464 

that by love so thriveth " 466 

she, by her good will " 479 

seen by night " 492 

banish'd by thy breath " 510 

at thy leisure, one by one " 518 

by Cupid's bow " 581 

still hanging by his neck " 593 

Do surfeit by the eye " 602 

his danger by thy will " 639 

be ruled by me " 673 

lives by subtlety " 675 

By this, poor "Wat " 697 

trodden on by many " 707 

relieved by any " 708 

To shame the sun by day and her 

by night " 732 

Disorder breeds by heating " 742 

lamp that burns by night " 755' 

Which by the rights " 759 

by this black-faced night " 773 

catch her by the neck " 872 

By this she hears " 877 

Who, overcome by doubt " 891 

By this, far off " 973 

By their suggestion " 1044 

shall I die by drops " 1074 



BY 



54 



BY 



By — When he was by V 

But by a kiss 

takes him by the hand 

By this the boy that by her side 
lay kill'd 

reft from her by death 

By whose swift aid 

Borne by the trustless wings M 

For by our ears 

welcomed by the Eoman dame 

Argued by beauty's red 

adored by this devil 

made glorious by his manly chiv- 
alry 

And so, by hoping more 
■ Make something nothing by aug- 
menting it 

Beaten away by brain-sick rude de- 
sire 

Shall by a painted cloth 

She took me kindly by the hand 

As corn o'ergrown by weeds 

Is almost choked by unresisted lust 

flatter'd by their leader's jocund 
show 

By reprobate desire 

Each one by him enforced 

by the light he spies 

By their" high treason 

by Lucrece' side 

hini by oath they truly honoured 

hunger by the conquest satisfied 

lust by gazing qualified 

for standing by her side 

Are by his flaming torch dimm'd 

From forth dull sleep by dreadful 
fancy waking 

by dumb demeanour seeks to show 

By thy bright beauty 

And sung by children 

by this dividing 

She conjures him by high almighty 
Jove 

By knighthood, gentry 

By her untimely tears 

By holy human law 

By heaven and earth 

by him that gave it thee 

When, pattern'd by thy fault 

swells the higher by tliis let 

by heaven, I will not hear thee 

wherein by nature they delight 

lived by foul devouring 

And by their mortal fault 

wakes her heart by beating on her 
breast 

by him defiled 

From me by strong assault 

ransaok'd by injurious theft 

master'd by his young 

souls that wander by him 

he was stay'd by thee , 

An accessary by thine inclination 

errors by opinion bred 

that doth live by slaughter 

that by alms doth live 

I fear'd by Tarquin's falchion 

clear this spot by death 

By this, lamenting Philomel 



1101 
1114 
1124 

1165 

1174 

1190 

2 

38 

51 

65 

85 

109 
137 



175 

245 
253 
281 
282 

296 
300 
303 
316 
369 
381 
410 
422 
424 
425 
448 

450 
474 
490 
525 
551 

568 
569 
570 
571 
572 
624 
629 
646 
667 
697 
700 
724 

759 
787 
835 
838 
863 
882 
917 
922 
937 
955 
986 
1046 
1053 
1079 



By— what's done by night B L 1092 

batter'd by the enemy " 1171 

Which by him tainted " 1182 

By whose example " 1194 

enforced by sympathy " 1229 

by force, by fraud or skill " 1243 

Assail'd by night " 1262 

By that her death to do her hus- 
band wrong " 1264 

By this, mild patience bid fair Lu- 
crece speak " 1263 

be ready by and by " 1292 

by this short schedule " 1312 

when he is by to hear her " 1318 

Shed for the slaughter'd husband 

by the wife " 1376 

shadow'd by his neighbour's ear " 1416 

Here friend by friend " 1487 

By deep surmise of others' detri- 
ment " 1579 

takes her by the bloodless hand " 1597 

ta'en jirisoner by the foe " 1608 

By foul enforcement might be done " 1623 

no flood by raining slaketh " 1677 

Knights, by their oaths " 1694 

By my excuse shall claim " 1715 

death by time outworn " 1761 

By this starts Collatine " 1772 

And only must be wail'd by Colla- 
tine " 1799 

throws that shallow habit by " 1814 

by whom thy fair wife bleeds " 1824 

By our strong arms " 1834 

Now, by the Capitol " 1835 

And by this chaste blood " 1836 

By heaven's fair sun " 1837 

By all our country rights " 1838 

And by chaste Lucrece' soul " 1839 

and by this bloody knife " 1840 

should by time decease Son 1 3 

To eat the world's due, by the grave 

and thee " 1 14 

Proving his beauty by succession 

thine " 2 12 

By unions married "86 

Strikes each in each by mutual or- 
dering " 8 10 
By children's eyes "98 
By oft predict that I in heaven find " 14 8 
check'd even by the self-same sky "15 6 
drawn by your own sweet skill " 16 14 
By chance or nature's changing 

course ' 

Andby addition me of thee defeated ' 
By adding one thing to my purpose 

nothing ' 

Stirr'd by a painted beauty to his 

verse ' 

by day my limbs, by night my 

mind ' 

not eased by night ' 

But day by night and night by day ' 
The one by toil, the other to com- 
plain ' 
Which I by lacking ' 
And Shalt by fortune ' 
outstripp'd by every pen ' 
Exceeded by the height ' 
by me be borne alone ' 



18 8 
20 11 



27 


13 


28 


3 


28 


4 


28 


7 


31 


2 


32 


3 


32 


6 


32 


8 


36 


4 



BY 



55 



CALL 



By — made lame by fortune's dearest 

spite Son 

And by a part of all thy glory " 

That by this separation T may give " 
By praising him here " 

By wilful taste of what thyself re- 

fusest " 

Hers, by thy beauty 
Thine, by thy beauty " 

By looking on thee " 

Eeceiviug nought by elements so 

slow " 

By those swift messengers " 

And by their verdict is determined " 
either by thy picture or my love " 
Call'd to that audit by advised re- 
spects " 
As if by some instinct the wretch 

did know " 

By new unfolding " 

By that sweet ornament " 

my verse distills your truth " 

Which but to-day by feeding is al- 

lay'd " 

by Time's fell hand defaced " 

strength by limping ^way disabled " 
art made tongue-tied by authority " 
That sin by him advantage should 

achieve " 

By seeing farther than the eye hath 

shown " 

they measure by thy deeds " 

pass'd by the ambush " 

shamed by that which I bring forth " 
Which by and by black night doth 

take " 

Consumed with that which it was 

nourish'd by " 

And by and by clean starved " 

surfeit day by day " 

Thou by thy dial's shady stealth " 
by thy true-telling friend '' 

phrase by all the Muses filed " 

spirit, by spirits taught " 

he nor his compeers by night " 

I hold thee but by thy granting " 
And I by this will be a gainer too " 
turn sourest by their deeds " 

but, by all above " 

bonds do tie me day by day " 

would by ill be cured " 

better is by evil still made better " 
gain by ill thrice more than I have 

spent " 

you were by my unkindness shaken " 
As I by yours " 

Not by our feeling, but by others' 

seeing " 

By their rank thoughts " 

have faculty by nature to subsist " 
Made more or less by thy continual 

haste " 

by paying too much rent " 

Who hast by waning grown " 

by thee blushing stand " 

And yet, by heaven, I think " 

eyes corrupt by over-partial looks " 
by lies we flatter'd be " 

slay me not by art " 



37 


3 


37 


12 


39 


7 


39 


14 


40. 


8 


41 


13 


41 


14 


43 


10 


44 


13 


45 


10 


46 


11 


47 


9 



50 


7 


52 


12 


54 


2 


54 


14 


56 


3 


64 


1 


66 


8 


66 


9 


67 


3 


69 


8 


69 


10 


70 


9 


72 


13 



73 


12 


75 


10 


75 


13 


77 


7 


82 


12 


85 


4 


86 


5 


80 


7 


87 


5 


88 


9 


94 


13 


110 


6 


117 


4 


118 


12 


119 


10 


119 


14 


120 


5 


120 


6 


121 


4 


121 


12 


122 


6 


123 


12 


125 


6 


126 


3 


128 


8 


130 


13 


137 


5 


138 


14 


139 


4 



By — ^Mad slanderers by mad ears be- 
lieved be Son 140 12 
By self-example niayst thou be de- 
nied " 142 14 
Commanded by the motion of thine 

eyes " 149 12 

fall by thy side " 151 12 

Cupid laid by his brand " 153 1 

Laid by his side " 154 2 

Came tripping by " 154 ' 4 
Was sleejiing by a virgin hand dis- 

arm'd " 154 8 
This brand she quenched in a cool 

well by " 154 9 

this by that I prove " 154 13 

Which one by one L C 38 

Of court, of city, and had let go by " 59 

And, privileged by age " 62 

sits he by her side " 65 

by nature's outwards so commended " 80 

by that cost more dear " 96 

noble by the sway " 108 

by him became his deed " Ill 

Or he his manage by the well-doing 

steed " 112 

fairer by their place " 117 

were all graced by him " 119 

who ever shunn'd by precedent " 155 

By blunting us to make our wits 

more keen " 161 

By how much of me " 189 

by si>irits of richest coat " 236 

'scapeth by the flight " 244 

If by me broke P P 3 13 

sitting by a brook " ' 4 1 
growing by a brook "65 
throws his mantle by "69 
kill'd too soon by death's sharp 

sting " 10 4 

Adonis sitting by her " 11 1 

Which by a gift of learning " 16 14 

By ringing in thy lady's ear " 19 28 

There is no heaven, by holy then " 19 45 

By shallow rivers, by whose falls " 20 7 

' Tereu, Tereu !' by and by " 21 14 

By-past — To put the by-past perils L C 158 

Cabin — keep his loathsome cabin VA 637 

Into the deep-dark cabins of her 

head " 1038 

to a cabin hang'd with care P P 14 3 

Cabinet — From his moist cabinet VA 854 

They, mustering to the quiet cab- 
inet R L 442 

Caged — she would the caged cloister 

fly LC 249 

. Caitiff— asks the weary caitiff VA 914 

Call — tapsters answering every call " ...,. 849 

Call — in her passion, calls it balm " 27 

calls it heavenly moisture " 64 

Doth call himself " 650 

' Callit not love " 793 

Even in the moment that we call 

them ours H L 868 

she hoarsely calls her maid " 1214 

call them not the authors " 1244 

At last she calls to mind " 1366 

The one doth call her his " 1793 

Calls back the lovely April Son 3 10 



CALL 



56 



CAN 



Call— nature calls thee to be gone Son 4 11 

Thou mayst call thine " 11 4 

And he that calls on thee " 38 11 

that thou mayst true love call " 40 3 

Or call it winter " 56 13 

I alone did call upon thy aid " 79 1 
For nothing this wide universe I 

call " 109 13 
who calls me well or ill " 112 3 
upon your dearest love to call " 117 3 
Whereto th' inviting time our fash- 
ion calls " 124 8 
To this I witness call the fools of 

time " 124 13 

O, call not me to justify the wrong " 139 1 

that I do call my friend " 149 5 
No want of conscience hold it that 

I call " 151 13 

Bountiful they will him call P P 21 40 

Called— call'd him all to nought VA 993 

call'd it then their shield R L fil 

let it not be call'd impiety " 1174 

may be call'd a hell " 1287 

Call'd to that audit Son 49 4 

Let not my love be call'd idolatry " 105 1 

I have been call'd unto L C 181 

Neither two nor one was called P T 40 

Calm — to calm contending kings R L 939 

calm looks, eyes wailing still " 1508 

Her cloudy looks will calm ere 

night PP 19 14 

Came — if there he came to lie VA 245 

How she came stealing " 344 

came in her mind the while R L 1536 

To me came Tarquin armed " 1544 

A stranger came " 1620 

in my chamber came " 1626 

came evidence to swear " 1650 

those that came with Collatine " 1689 

And sue a friend came debtor for 

my sake Son 134 11 

Came tripping by " 154 4 

Came there for cure " 154 13 

Came for additions L C 118 

which in his level came " 309 

Can — Look how he can VA 79 

Never can blab " 126 

Can thy right hand " 158 

sighs can never grave it " 376 

that can so well defend her " 472 

I can be well contented " 513 

she takes all she can " 564 

she can no more " 577 

spear's point can enter " 626 

For love can comment • " 714 

can my invention make R L 225 

fear can neither fight nor fly " 230 

How can they then assist me " 350 

nothing can aflection's course con- 
trol " 50 

no device can take " 535 

From vassal actors can be wiped 

away " 608 

Can comprehend in still imagina- 
tion " 702 

Ere he can see his own abomination " 704 

Can curb his heat " 706 

that every eye can see " 750 

no good that we can say is ours " 873 



Can— Thy violent vanities can never 

last R L 894 

Though men can cover crimes " 1252 

I thus far can dispense " 1279 

than I can well express " 1286 

' can lurk in such a look " 1535 

'can lurk' from 'cannot' took " 1537 

Ere once she can discharge " 1605 

no excuse can give the fault amend- 
ing " 1614 

can see what once I was " 1764 

And nothing 'gainst Time's scythe 

can make defence Son 12 13 
Nor can I fortune to brief minutes 

tell " 14 5 

Can make you live " 16 12 
So long as men can breathe or eyes 

can see " 18 13 

How can I then be elder " 22 8 

How can I then return " 28 1 

Then can I drown an eye " 30 5 

Then can I grieve " 30 9 

of such a salve can speak " 34 7 

Nor can thy shame give physic " 34 9 

How can my Muse want subject " 38 1 

What can mine own pi;aise " 39 3 

thought can jump both sea and land " 44 7 

I can allege no cause " 49 14 

Thus can my love " 51 1 

swift extremity can seem but slow " 51 6 
Then can no horse with my desire 

keep pace " 51 9 
Can bring him to his sweet up- 
locked treasure " 52 2 
And you, but one, can every 

shadow lend " 53 4 
What strong hand can hold his 

swift foot back " 65 11 

who his spoil of beauty can forbid " 65 12 

that the tliought of hearts can mend '' 69 2 

in nie can nothing worthy prove " 72 4 

The earth can have but earth " 74 7 

he can afford " 79 11 

The earth can yield " 81 7 
What strained touches rhetoric can 

lend " 82 10 

poets can in praise devise " 83 14 

which can saj' more " 84 1 

if he can tell " 84 7 

I can set down a story " 88 6 

For there can live no hatred " 93 5 

that eyes can see " 95 12 

if I no more can write " 103 5 

much more than in ray verse can sit " 103 13 

you never can be old "104 1 
Can yet the lease of my true love 

control " 107 3 

thy record never can be miss'd " 122 8 

my o'erpress'd defence can bide " 139 8 

my five sensescan " 141 9 
How can it? O, how can Love's eye 

be true " 148 9 

Those that can see thou lovest " 149 14 

that art can comprehend P P 5 6 
that well can thee commend "58 

no cement can redress " 13 10 
My shepherd's pipe can sound no 

deal " 18 27 

A cripple soon can find a halt " 19 10 



CAN 



57 



CASE 



Can — That defunctive music can P T 14 

If what parts can so remain " 48 

Canccll'd— date, cancell'd ere well 

begun R L 26 

Cancell'd my fortunes " 934 

date from cancell'd destiny " 1729 

love's long since cancell'd woe Son 30 7 
Candle — Ag, those gold candles " 21 12 

Canker — This canker that eats up V A 656 

And loathsome canker lives in 

sweetest bud Smi 35 4 

canker vice the sweetest buds doth 

love " 70 7 

a canker in the fragrant rose " 95 2 

A vengeful canker eat him up " 99 13 

Canker-blooms — The canker-blooms 

have full as deep a dye " 54 5 

Cankering — Foul-cankering rust the 

hidden treasure frets V A 767 

Cannon — from discharged cannon 

fumes R L 1043 

Cannot — she cannot choose but love VA 79 

help she cannot get " 93 

she cannot right her cause " 220 

cannot be easily harm'd " 627 

that I cannot reprove " 787 

no, it cannot be " 937 

cannot express my grief " 1069 

the thing that cannot be amended R L 578 

kings' misdeeds cannot be hid in 

clay " 609 

it cannot cure his pain " 861 

when he cannot vise it " 862 

no, that cannot be " 1049 

That cannot tread the way " 1152 

cannot abuse a body dead " 1267 

The repetition cannot make it less " 1285 

The weary time she cannot enter- 
tain " 1361 

'It cannot be,' quoth she " 1534 

'can lurk' from 'cannot' took " 1537 

'It cannot be,' she in that sense 

forsook " 1538 

'It cannot be, I find " 1539 

that cannot write to thee Son 38 7 

1 cannot blame thee " 40 6 
cannot provoke him on " 50 9 
death, which cannot choose " 64 13 
thy praise cannot be so thy praise " 70 11 
thy memory cannot retain " 77 9 
your memory death cannot take " 81 3 
of my silence cannot boast " 86 11 
I cannot know thy change " 93 6 
Cannot dispraise but in a kind of 

praise " 95 7 

Crabbed age and youth cannot live 

together PP 12 1 

but cannot pluck the pelf " 14 12 

Senseless trees they cannot hear 

thee " 21 21 

If thou wake, he cannot sleep " 21 54 

Truth may seem, but cannot be P T 62 

Canopied — And .... in darkness RL 398 

Canopy — from heat did .... the herd Son 12 6 
I bore the canopy " 125 1 

Canst — Thou canst not see V A 139 

and canst not feel " 201 

What! canst thou talk " 427 

what canst thou boast " 1077 



Canst— how canst thou fulfil R L 628 

yet canst not live Son 4 8 

audit canst thou leave " 4 12 

For thou not farther than my 

thoughts canst move " 47 11 

Thou canst not, love, disgrace me " 89 5 
Thou canst not vex me " 92 9 

Thou canst not then use rigour " 1.33 12 
Canst thou, O cruel " 149 ] 

Cap— A cap of flowers PP 20 11 

Caparison — For rich caparisons I'^4 286 

Capitol— bytheCapitolthatweadorePZ 1835 

Captain — when their captain once 

doth yield VA 893 

Affection is my captain R L 271 

And as their captain " 298 

captain jewels in the carcanet Son 52 8 
captive good attending captain ill " 66 12 

Captivate — to captivate the eye V A 281 

Captive — my captive and my slave " 101 

The coward captive vanquished R L 75 

A captive victor that hath lost " 730 

captive good attending captain ill Son 66 12 
Car — from highmost pitch with weary 

car "79 

Carcanet — captain jewels in the . . . . " 52 8 

Carcass — The carcass of a beauty L C 11 

Care— my thought, my busy care VA 383 

and with what care " 681 

Save thieves and cares R L 126 

To whose weak ruins muster troops 

of cares " 720 

carrier of grisly care " 926 

deep-drenched in a sea of care " 1100 

where cares have carved some " 1445 

and grim care's reign " 1451 

His face, though full of cares " 1503 

kill'd with deadly cares " 1593 

dearest and mine only care Son 48 7 

winter, which, being full of care " 56 13 
I throw all care " 112 9 

her whose busy care is bent " 143 6 

now reason is past care " 147 9 

age is full of care P P 12 2 

to a cabin hang'd with care " 14 3 

Care, — What cares he now V A 285 

Now Nature cares not " 953 

For what care I who calls me Son 112 3 

Careful — How careful was I " 48 1 

Lo, as a careful housewife " 143 1 

Careless— careless lust stirs up V A 556 

a careless hand of pride L C 30 

Careless of thy sorrowing P P 21 26 
Carriage — her levell'd eyes their car- 
riage ride • L C 22 

Carrier — carrier of grisly care R L 926 

Carry — He carries thence incaged VA .582 

with speed prepare to carry it R L 1294 

Without all bail shall carry me 
away Son 14: 2 

Carry-tale — This carry-tale, dissen- 

tious Jealousy V A 657 

Carve— O, carve not with thy hours Son 19 9 

Carved — where cares have .... some PX 1445 

carved in it with tears " 1713 

She carved thee for her seal Son 11 13 

Case — his conduct in this case R L 313 

beggar wails his case " 711 

my case is past the help of law " 1022 



CASE 



58 



CHARM 



Case — love in love's fresh case Son 108 .9 

not in his case L C 116 

Casket— To burn the guiltless RL 1057 

Cast — cast into eternal sleeping V A 951 

love hath cast his utmost sum Son 49 3 
and I be cast away " 80 13 

Cast-awiiy — a hopeless cast-away R L 744 

Castle— The strongest castle P P 19 29 

Cat — Yet foul night-waking cat R L 554 

Catch — Some catcli her by the neck V A 872 

that this night-owl will catch RL 360 

holds what it doth catch Son 113 8 

housewife runs to catch " 143 1 

Cries to catch her whose busy care " 143 6 
But if thou catch thy hope " 143 11 

Catching — Jealous of catching VA 321 

Catcliing all jjassions L C 126 

Caterpillar — As caterpillars do the 

tender leaves V,A 798 

Cattle — that grazed his cattle nigh L C 57 

Caught — caught the yielding prey V A 547 

Cause — she cannot right her cause " 220 

where is no cause of fear " 1153 

It shall be cause of war " 1159 

give the sneaped birds more cause 

to sing R L 333 

the cause of my untimely death " 1178 

No cause, but company " 1236 

The cause craves haste " 1295 

I can allege no cause Son 49 14 

The cause of this fair gift " 87 7 

and see* just cause of hate " 150 10 

and yet no cause I have PP 10 7 

the cause of all my moan " 18 51 

Causeless — 'tis a causeless fantasy V A 897 

Causer— Causer of this P P 18 8 

Cautel — Applied to cautels L C 303 

Cave--=-These lovely caves VA 247 

all the neighbour caves " 830 

in his shelly cave with pain " 1034 

Grim cave of death R L 769 

Cfive-keeping — Cave-keeping evils " 1250 

Cavil — I cavil with mine infamy " 1025 

Thus cavils she with everything " 1093 

Cease — O time, cease thou thy course " 1765 

the times should cease Son 11 7 

Ceased — When he hath ceased VA 919 

Ceaseless — Thou ceaseless lackey R L 967 

Ceasiug — .... their clamorous cry VA 693 

Cedar — The cedar stoops not R L 664 

wither at the cedar's roots " 665 

Cedar-tops — That cedar-tops and hills 

seem burnish'd gold V A 858 

Celestial— I'll sigh celestial breath " 189 

on his celestial face Son 33 6 

Celestial as thou art P P 5 13 

Cell— And in thy shady cell R L 881 

Cement — no cement can redress P P 13 10 
Censure — That censures falsely Son 148 4 
Centre — the .... of my sinful earth " 146 1 
Ceremony — ceremony of love's rite " 23 6 

Certain — with certain of his friends VA 588 

Her certain sorrow writ R L 1311 

dirge of her certain ending " 1612 

When I was certain Son 115 11 

These are certain signs to know P P 21 57 

Cliafe— He chafes her lips VA 477 

Chafing — All swoln with chafing " 325 

of an angry-chafing boar " 662 



Chain — in a red-rose chain V A 110 

Chained — which wretchedness hath 

chained R L .. .. 900 

Challenge— doth that fair field " 58 

Chamber — The locks between her. ... " 302 

unto the chamber door " 337 

Into the chamber wickedly he 

stalks *' 365 

with shining falchion in my cham- 
ber came " 1626 

Champaign— like a goodly plain " 1247 

Cliampion — Her champion mounted 

for the VA 596 

Chance — 

wondering each other's chance R L 1596 

acquit me from this chance " 1706 

By chance or nature's changing 

course Son 18 8 

Change — With shifting change " 20 4 

variation or quick change " 76 2 

upon desired change " 89 6 

I cannot know thy change " 93 6 

And in this change " 105 11 

Change — shall change thy good R L 656 

to change their kinds " 1147 

0, change thy thought that I may 

change my mind Son 10 9 

To change your day of youth " 15 12 

to change my state with kings " 29 14 

That my steel'd sense or changes 

right or wrong " 112 8 

and change decrees of kings "115 6 

thou shalt not boast that I do change " 123 1 
they would change their state " 128 9 

Changed — blue blood to black R L 1454 

Sorrow changed to solace P P 15 11 

Changing — nature's .... course Son 18 8 

Each changing place " 60 3 

Channel — In the sweet channel V A 958 

in bloody channel lies RL 1487 

O, how the channel L C 285 

Chant — hears them chant it V A 869 

Chaos — black chaos comes again " 1020 

Vast sin-concealing chaos R L 767 

Chap— Her cheeks with chaps " 1452 

Character — at first in was done Son 59 8 

Eeserve their character " 85 3 

that ink may character " 108 1 

it had conceited characters L C 16 

Thought characters and words 

merely but art " 174 

Charaeter'd — . . . . in my brow RL 807 

Full charaeter'd with lasting mem- 
ory Son 122 2 

Charge — When thou shalt .... me R L 226 

Gives the hot charge " 434 

Eat up thy charge Son 146 8 

My heart doth charge the watch P P 15 2 

Charged — or victor being charged Son 70 10 

Nature hath charged me L C 220 

Charging — Charging the sour-faced 

groom R L 1334 

Chariot — In her light chariot V A 1192 

Charitable — no time for ... . deeds R Ij 908 

Charity — in the charity of age L C 70 

Charm — bewitch'd with lust's foul 

charm R L 173 

when I might charm thee so " 1681 

to charm a sacred nun L C 260 



CHARM 



59 



CHIEF 



Cliarin — should use like loving 

charms PP 11 8 

Charmed — charm'd the sight R L 1404 

affections iu his charmed power L C 146 

my leisures ever charmed " 193 

Cliarter — your cliarter is so strong Son 58 9 

The charter of thy worth " 87 3 

Chary — which I will keep so chary " 22 11 

Chase — hied him to the chase V A 3 

As if another chase " 696 

it is no gentle chase " 883 

in poor revenge, held it in chase R L 1736 

her neglected child holds her in 

chase Son 143 5 

Cha^e — and then I chase it V A 410 

To chase injustice R L 1693 

I thy babe chase thee afar behind Son 143 10 

Chased — 

accomplishment so hotly chased RL 716 

from forth her fair streets chased " 1834 

Chasing — roe that's tired with .... V A 561 

Chaste — Lucrece the chaste R L 7 

Haply that name of 'chaste' " 8 

our mistress' ornaments are chaste " 322 

which thy chaste bee kept " 840 

And by this chaste blood " 1836 

And by chaste Lucrece' soul " 1839 

that vow'd chaste life to keep Son 154 3 

To whose sound chaste wings obey P T 4 

Chastest — in the chastest tears R L 682 

Chastity — despite of fruitless .... V A 751 

Pure Chastity is rifled R L 692 

of sweet chastity's decay " 808 

my white stole of chastity L C 297 

and praised cold chastity " 315 

still conquer chastity P P 4 8 

It was married chastity P T 61 

Chat— this bootless chat VA 422 

As palmers' chat makes short their 

pilgrimage RL 791 

Cheap — sold cheap what is most dear (Sow 110 3 

Cheater — Then gentle cheater " 151 ' 3 

Check— To check the tears R L 1817 

patience, tame to sufferance, bide 

each check Son 58 7 

If thy soul check thee " 136 1 

Check'd — Priam check'd his son's 

desire R L 1490 

Sap check'd with frost Son 5 7 

Cheered and check'd " 15 6 

Cheek — doth she stroke his cheek VA 45 

maiden burning of his cheeks " 50 

his brow, his cheek, his chin " 59 

Wishing her cheeks were " 65 

making her cheeks aU wet " 83 

Souring his cheeks " 185 

Red cheeks and fiery eyes ■ " 219 

in each cheek appears " 242 

a check that smiles " 252 

now her cheek was pale " 347 

his fair cheek feels " 352 

His tenderer cheek " 353 

Claps her pale cheek " 468 

strikes her on the cheeks " 475 

Usurps her cheek " • 591 

her two cheeks fair " 957 

Sighs dry her cheeks " 966 

Which her cheek melts " 982 

pale cheeks and the blood " 1169 



Cheek — Their silver cheeks R L 61 

her rosy cheek lies under " 386 

lank and leau discolour'd cheek " 708 

Upon my cheeks " 756 

Poor Lucrece' cheeks " 1217 

Nor why her fair cheeks " 1225 

that down thy cheeks are raining " 1271 

the blood his cheeks replenish " 1357 

Her cheeks with chaps " 1452 

Clieeks neither red nor pale " 1510 

O, from thy cheeks " 1762 

On Helen's cheek Son 53 7 
painting imitate his cheek " 67 5 
Thus is his cheek the map " 68 1 
Aud found it in thy cheek " 79 11 
Where cheeks need blood " 82 14 
Which on thy soft cheek for com- 
plexion dwells " 99 4 
though rosy lips and cheeks " 116 9 
roses see I in her cheeks " 130 6 
the grey cheeks of the east " 132 6 

her pale and pined cheek beside L C 32 

Each cheek a river " 283 

which in his cheek so glow'd " 324 

thy cheeks may blow P P 17 9 
Cheek'd — Eose-cheek'd Adonis hied 

him VA 3 

Cheer- 
smiled with so sweet a cheer R L 204 

'tis with so dull a cheer Son 97 13 

she securely gives good cheer R L 89 

Cheer — He cheers the morn VA 484 

cheers up his burning eye R L 435 

To cheer the ploughman " 958 

they will not cheer thee P T 21 22 

Clieered^Cheered and cheek'd Son 15 6 

Cheering— cheering up her senses VA ...:. 896 

Chequer'd — chequer'd with white " 1168 

Cherish — To dry the old oak's sap 

and cherish springs R L 950 

as Priam him did cherish " 1546 

thou shouldst in bounty cherish Son 11 12 
Cherry — 

mulberries and ripe-red cherries VA 1103 

Cherubin — Such cherubins as your 

sweet self resemble Son l\i 6 

Which, like a cherubin L C 319 

Chest — Some purer chest to close R L 761 

lock'd up in any chest Son 48 9 

time that keeps you as my chest " 52 9 

from Time's chest lie hid " 65 10 

Chid — And chid the painter R L 1528 

Chide — And 'gins to chide VA 46 

If thou wilt chide " 48 

thus chides she Death " 932 

if thou mean to chide R L 484 

chides his vanish'd, loathed delight " 742 

But chide rough winter " 1255 

They do but sweetly chide thee Son 8 7 

Aud chide thy beauty " 41 10 
chide the world-without-end hour " 57 5 

The forward violet thus did I chide " 99 1 

do you with Fortune chide " 111 1 

Chiding — Chiding that tougue " 145 6 

Chief— The field's chief flower VA 8 

present sorrow seemeth chief " 970 

should be thy chief desire Son 10 S 
That she hath thee, is of my wail- 
ing chief " 42 3 



CHIEFLY 



60 



CLIP 



Chiefly — Chiefly in love whose leave 

exceeds VA 568 

And I in deep delight am chiefly 

drown'd PP 8 11 

Spare not to spend, and chiefly there " 19 26 

Child— the old become a child VA 1152 

as he is but Night's child R L 785 

The nurse, to still her child " 813 

the child a man, the man a child " 954 

fond and testy as a child " 1094 

If in the child the father's image 

Ues " 1753 

This fair child of mine Son 2 10 

Eesembling sire and child " 8 11 

some child of yours alive " 17 13 

As any mother's child " 21 11 

To see his active child " 37 2 

burthen of a former child " 59 4 

were but the child of state " 124 1 

Whilst her neglected child " 143 5 

Childish— And childish error VA 898 

Then, childish fear, avaunt RL 274 

Such childish humour " 1825 

Children — Nor children's tears nor 

mothers' groans " 431 

And sung by children " 525 

and thy children's sake " 533 

If children pre-decease progenitors " 1756 

By children's eyes Son 9 S 

Those children nursed " 77 11 

Chill— and chill extincture liath L C 294 

Chin — his brow, his cheek, his chin V A 59 

did he raise his chin " 85 

her snow-white dimpled chin R L 420 

peers her whiter chin " 472 

Small show of man was yet upon 

his chin L C 92 

Chip— with those dancing chips Son 128 10 

Chivalry — by his manly chivalry R L 109 

Choice — when most his choice is fro- 

ward VA 570 

Choir — still the choir of echoes " 840 

Bare ruin'd choirs, where late Son 73 4 

Choke — chokes her pleading tongue VA 217 

Choked— Is almost choked R L 282 

Choose — she cannot choose but love V A 79 

death, which cannot choose Son 64 13 

Press never thou to choose anew P P 19 34 

Chopp'd— Beated and chopp'd Son 62 10 

Chorus — As chorus to their tragic 

scene P T 52 

Chorus-like— her eyes did rain VA 360 

Chose— for their habitation chose out 

thee Son 55 10 

thine eye hath chose the dame P P 19 1 

Chronicle — in the chronicle of wasted 

time Son 106 1 

Chnrl — And tender churl " 1 12 

When that churl Death " 32 2 

Then, churls, their thoughts " 69 11 

Churlish— Scorning his drum VA 107 

churlish, harsh in voice " 134 

a churlish swine to gore " 616 

>Ci(je_to 'cide this title Son 46 9 

Cinder — Here enclosed in cinders lie P T 55 

Cipher— To cipher me how fondly I 

did dote R L 207 

To cipher what is writ " 811 

Cipher' d—cipher'd cither's heart " 1396 



Circle — ^Blue circles stream'd RL 1587 

Circles her body in " 1739 

Circled— ivory globes .... with blue V A 407 

Her circled eyne " 1229 

Circuit— Within the circuit " 2.30 

Circumstance — In such-like .... " 844 

with circumstances strong R L 1262 

with dreadful circumstance " 1703 

Cistern — coral cisterns filling " 1234 

Cite — Doth cite each moving sense P P 15 3 

Cited — trespass cited up in rhymes R L 524 

Citizen — May feel her heart, poor .... " 465 

City — and enter this sweet city " 469 

the city to destroy " 1369 

fire to burn thy city " 1554 

upon these terms, I held my city L C 176 

Of court, of city " 59 

Civil — civil home-bred strife V A 764 

Such civil war Son 35 12 

sober guards and civil fears L C 298 

Clad — clad in mourning black R L 1585 

Claim — Then virtue claims from 

beauty " 59 

shall claim excuse's giving " 1715 

possess the claim they lay " 1794 

Clamorous — Ceasing their .... cry VA 693 

Clamour — pens her piteous clamours 

in her head R L .... 681 

'my wife' with clamours fiU'd " 1804 

In clamours of all size L C 21 

Clap— Claps her pale cheek VA 468 

Clapping — till clapping makes it red " 468 

Clapping their proud tails " 923 

Clasp— With coral clasps and amber 

studs PP 20 14 

Claw — under the gripe's sharp claws Pi 543 

Clay — misdeeds cannot be hid in clay " 609 

When I perhaps compounded am 
with clay Son 71 10 

Clean — clean starved for a look " 75 10 

Cleanly— cold fault cleanly out VA 694 

Cleanly-coined- in excuses R L 1073 

Clear- thou clear god VA 860 

the clear unmatched red and white Pi 11 

In his clear bed " 382 

as clear from this attaint of mine " 825 

Those round clear pearls " 1553 

To the clear day Son 43 7 

The clear eye's 7noiety " 46 12 

what nature made so clear " 84 10 

Clear wells spring not P P 18 37 

C/ear— To clear this spot by death Pi 1053 

the better so to clear her " 1.320 

fountain clears itself again " 1707 

her mind untainted clears " 1710 

sees not till heaven clears Son 148 12 

Clear'd — sin is .... with absolution RL 354 

Clearer — with thy much .... light Son 43 7 
should afterwards burn clearer " 115 4 

Cleave — cleaves an infant's heart V A 942 

Cleft— O cleft effect ! cold modesty L C 293 

Clepc- — Sheclepeshimking of graves F^4 995 

Clerk — And like unletter'd clerk Son 85 6 

Client— The client breaks VA 336 

To trembling clients R L 1020 

Climb — permit the sun to climb " 775 

Climb'd^climb'd the steep-up heav- 
enly hill Son 7 5 
Clip— to clip Elysium VA 600 



CLIP 



61 



COLOUR 



Clip — to kiss and clip me P P 11 14 

Clipp'd — And then slieclipp'd Adonis " 11 6 

Cloak— To cloak offunces R L 749 

thy black all-hiding cloak " 801 

travel forth without my cloak Son 34 2 

Clock — When I do count the clock " 12 1 

watch the clock for you " 57 6 

Cloister — the caged cloister fly L C 249 

Cloister'd — still in night would clois- 

ter'd be • RL 1085 

Close — The coffer-lids that close his 

eyes VA 1127 

The curtains being close R L 367 

to close so pure a mind " 761 

Closed — sleep had closed up " 163 

Closet — Doth in her poison'd closet " 1659 

A closet never pierced Son 46 6 

Close-tongued— With treason R L 770 

Closure — into the quiet closure V A 782 

Within the gentle closure Son 48 11 

Cloth — by a painted cloth be kept in 

awe RL 245 

Clothe— Began to clothe his wit " 1809 

Cloud — And coal-black clouds V A 533 

with the meeting clouds contend " 820 

Like many clouds " 972 

To draw the cloud R L 371 

Eushing from forth a cloud " 373 

But when a black-faced cloud " 547 

Knit poisonous clouds " 777 

unto the clouds bequeathed " 1727 

when clouds do blot the heaven Son 28 10 
the basest clouds to ride " 33 5 

The region cloud hath mask'd him " 33 12 
To let base clouds o'ertake me " 34 3 

that through the cloud thou break " 34 5 
Clouds and eclipses stain " 35 3 

Cloud-eclipsed — twosuns were. ... RL 1224 

Clouded — clouded with his brow's 

repine V A 490 

The moon being clouded R L 1007 

Cloud-kissing — Threatening cloud- 
kissing llion " 1370 

Cloudy — Dian cloudy and forlorn V A 725 

No cloudy show of stormy, bluster- 
ing weather R L 115 

But cloudy Lucrece shames herself " 1084 

Her cloudy looks will calm PP 19 14 

Cloy — yet not cloy thy lips V A 19 

Cloy'd — That, cloy'd with much, he 

pineth RL 98 

Cloying— 
of your ne'er-cloying sweetness Son 118 5 

Coal — She red and hot as coals V A 35 

Even as a dying coal " 338 

Affection is a coal " 387 

To quench the coal R L 47 

Like dying coals burnt out " 1379 

Coal-black — And coal-black clouds V A 533 

bathe his coal-black wings R L 1009 

Coasteth — she coasteth to the cry V A 870 

Coat — an eye-sore in my golden coat P i 205 

by spirits of richest coat L C 236 

Cock— The cock that treads them P P 19 40 
Cockatrice — a cockatrice' dead-kill- 
ing eye R L 540 

Coffer — that coffers up his gold " 855 

Coffer-lids— She lifts the coifer-lids VA 1127 

Coined— in cleauly-coin'd excuses R L 1073 



Coined — tales to please me hath she 

coined P P 1 9 

Cold — rheumatic and cold V A 135 

cold and senseless stone " 211 

the weather being cold " 402 

the cold fault cleanly out " 694 

Which with cold terror " 1048 

and that is cold " 1124 

wrapp'd in repentant cold R L 48 

from the cold stone sparks of fire " 177 

As from this cold flint " 181 

converts to cold disdain " 691 

parching heat nor freezing cold " 1145 

doth quake with cold " 1556 

And in that cold " 1557 

in key -cold Lucrece' bleeding 

stream " 1774 

when thou feel'st it cold Son 2 ] 4 

folly, age, and cold decay " 11 6 

of death's eternal cold " 13 12 

which shake against the cold " 73 3 

cold and to temptation slow " 94 4 

Three winters cold " 104 3 

In a cold valley-fountain " 153 4 

But kept cold distance L C 237 

to physic your cold breast " 259 

What breast so cold " 292 

cold modesty, hot wrath " 293 

and praised cold chastity " 315 

age is weak and cold P P 12 7 

Coldly — How coldly those impedi- 
ments L C 269 

Cold-pale — With cold-pale weakness V A 892 

CoUatine — Of Collatine's fair love R L 7 

Whom Collatine unwisely " 10 

Or why is Collatine " 33 

which Collatine doth owe " 82 

Collatine's high name " 108 

self-same seat sits Collatine " 289 

Then Collatine again " .381 

Tarquin wronged me, I Collatine " 819 

For Collatine's dear love " 821 

was pure to Collatine " 826 

If, Collatine, thine honour " 834 

My Collatine would else " 916 

'well, well, dear <]ollatine " 1058 

for heaven and Collatine " 1166 

till my Collatine " 1177 

'Thou, Collatine, shalt oversee " 1205 

Collatine may know " 1312 

While Collatine and his " 1609 

fhose that came with Collatine " .... 16SU 

Stood Collatine and all " 1731 

By this, starts Collatine " 1772 

be wail'd by Collatine " 1799 

'Woe, woe,' quoth Collatine " 1802 

' Why, Collatine, is woe the cure for 
woe " 1821 

CoUatinus — ' If Collatinus dream " 218 

' Had Collatinus kill'd " 232 

Where her beloved Collatinus " 256 

in Collatinus' face " 829 

the tears in Collatinus' eyes " 1817 

Collatiuni — And to Collatium " 4 

When at Collatium " 50 

Colour — colour, pace, and bone V A 294 

their colours fresh and trim " 1079 

Of cither's colour was the other 

queen R L 66 



COLOUR 



62 



COMPANION 



Colour — fear did make her colour 

rise It L 257 

for colour or excuses " 267 

Under what colour he commits this 

ill " 476 

The colour in thy face " 477 

Under that colour am I come " 481 

Her lively colour kill'd " 1593 

hath thy fair colour spent " 1600 

But sweet or colour it had stol'n Son 99 15 
Truth needs no colour, with his 

colour fix'd " 101 6 
Colour'd — 

with purple-colour'd face V A 1 

the ruby-colour'd portal " 451 

colour'd with his high estate R L 92 

pensiveness and colour'd sorrow " 1497 

a woman colour'd ill Son 144 4 

a woman colour'd ill P P 2 4 

Colt— The colt that's back'd V A 419 

Combat — This beauteous combat " 365 

an eager combat fight RL 1298 

Long was the combat doubtful P P 16 5 

Combined — parcels in .... sums LC 231 

Combustions— As dry .... matter VA 1162 

Come — Here come and sit " 17 

he comes in every jar " 100 

Comes breath perfumed " 444 

Come not within " 639 

Lust's winter comes " 802 

black chaos comes again " 1020 

Now is he come unto the chamber 

door RL 337 

am I come to scale " 481 

How comes it then " 895 

He gratis comes, and thou " 914 

would else have come to me " 916 

and all that are to come " 923 

wouldst thou one hour come back " 965 

shall never come to growth " 1062 

' Come, Philomel, that singst " 1128 

to come and visit me " 1307 

To this well-painted piece is Lu- 

crece come " 1443 

mindful messenger come back " 1583 

Comes all too late • " 1686 

so thick come in his poor heart's aid " 1784 

my verse in time to come Son 17 1 

The age to come would say " 17 7 

but now come back again " 45 11 

thou mayst come and part " 48 12 

if ever that time come " 49 1 

Come daily to the banks " 56 11 

Time will come and take " 64 12 
a modern quill doth come too short " 83 7 

Though words come hindmost " 85 12 

Comes home again " 87 12 

Come in the rearward " 90 6 

But in the onset come " 90 11 

di-eaming on things to come " 107 2 

Thence comes it that my name " 111 5 

bending sickle's compass come " 116 10 

• that I come so near " 136 1 

in her heart did mercy come " 145 5 

and to your audit comes L C 230 

Anon he comes, and throws P P 6 9 

Anon Adonis comes "96 

and come again to-morrow " 14 5 

and bade me come to-morrow " 15 12 



Come — To this troop come thou not 

near P T 8 

Comely-distant— And sits he L C 65 

Coniest— thou thy tale to tell P P 19 7 

Comfort — Take all my comfort Son 37 4 

Mo^ worthy comfort "48 6 

to be my comfort still " 134 4 

I have of comfort and despair " 144 1 

I have of comfort and despair PP 2 1 

Comfortable — No .... star did lend R L 164 

Comforter— Look, the world's VA 529 

Comfortetli — like sunshine " 799 

Comfort-killing- O .... Night R L 764 

Coming— He sees her coming V A 337 

purpose of his coming hither RL 113 

Coming from thee " 843 

coming from a king " 1002 

Against this coming end Son 13 3 
Since, seldom coming, in the long 

year set " 52 6 

Command — commands mine eyes V A ...".. 584 

Hast thou command R L 624 

command thy rebel will " 625 

similes to your own command L C 227 

Commanded — Commanded by the 

motion Son 149 12 

Commander — on him, invisible ... . VA 1004 

in great commanders RL 1387 

Commanding — commanding in his 

monarchy L C 196 

Commandment — They have at .... PP 21 46 

Commence — a lawful plea .... Son ?5 11 

Here the anthem doth commence P T 21 

Commend — His eye commends the 

leading " R L 436 

So, I commend me from our house " 1308 

even so as foes commend Son 69 4 
that tongue that well can thee com- 
mend PP 5 8 

Commended — by nature's outwards 

so commended L C 80 

Comment — For love can comment VA 714 

in secret influence comment Son 15 4 

While comments of your praise " 85 2 

comment upon that otfence " 89 2 
making lascivious comments on thy 

sport " 95 6 

Commission — whose leave exceeds 

commission VA 568 

Commit — he commits this ill R L 476 

such murderous shame commits Son 9 14 
Those pretty wrongs that liberty 

commits " 41 1 

commit to these waste blanks " 77 10 

Committed-i-thoughtof his evil R L 972 

Let sin, alone committed " 1480 

hath my heart committed Son 119 5 

CommixM — sight distractedly ... . LC 28 

Common — excel a common one VA 293 

human law and common troth R L 571 

that thou dost common grow Son 69 14 

yield me but a common grave " 81 7 

sweets grown common " 102 12 

the wide woi'ld's common place " 137 10 

Compact — all compact of fire VA 149 

so compact, so kind R L 1423 

Compacted— The poisonous simple 

sometime is compacted " 530 

Companion — companions at thy state " 1066 



COMPANY 



63 



CONQUER 



Company — slain in merry company iJ X 1110 

No cause, but company " 1236 

his lord and other company " 15S4 

Use his company no more P P 21 50 

Compare — sweet above compare V A 8 

■which she compares to tears " 1176 

Braving compare, disdainfully did 

sting R L 40 

all sorrow doth compare " 1102 

Shall I compare thee Son 18 . 1 

a couplemeut of proud compare " 21 5 
Compare them with the bettering " 32 5 
thy trespass with compare " 35 6 

belied with false compare " 130 14 

O, but with mine comi»are " 142 3 

Compared — may be compared well V A 701 

Compared with loss of thee Son 90 14 

Comparing — Comparing it to her 

Adonis' breath VA 1172 

Comparing him to that R L 1565 

Compass — might .... his fair fair " 343 

his bending sickle's compass come Son 116 10 

Compass'd — Upon his crest VA 272 

compass'd oft with venturing " 567 

Compassionate — and be RL 594 

Compeer — nor his compeers by night Soyi 86 7 

Compelled — from this .... stain R L 1708 

Compile — of that which I compile Son 78 9 

Compiled — of your praise, richly . . . . " 85 2 

Complain — and complain on theft V A 160 

yet complain on drouth " 544 

host of heaven I complain me R L 598 

of weariness he did complain him " 845 

the other to complain Son 28 7 

to hear her so complain P P 21 15 

Complained — Lucrece' soul that late 

complained R L ...i. 1839 

Complaining- — counterfeit of her ... . " 1269 

weary time with her complaining " 1570 

Complexion— of a man's VA 215 

is his gold complexion dimm'd Son 18 6 
on thy soft cheek for complexion 

dwells " 99 4 

that thy complexion lack " 132 14 

Complexion'd— the swart-complex- 

ion'd night " 28 11 

Composed — To this composed wonder " 59 10 

Composition — Until life's composi- 
tion be recured "45 9 

Compound — In a pure compound R L 531 

and to compounds strange Son 76 4 
With eager compounds " 118 2 
For compound sweet " 125 7 
As compound love L C 259 

Compounded — I perhaps compound- 
ed am with clay Son 71 10 
Simple were so well compounded P T 44 

Comprehend — beforehand counsel 

comprehends R L 494 

comprehend in still imagination " 702 

pleasures live that art can compre- 
hend PP 5 6 

Concave — whose concave womb re- 
worded L C 1 

Conceit — than bottomless conceit R L 701 

Conceit and grief an eager combat 

fight " 1298 

Conceit deceitful, so compact " 1423 

the conceit of this inconstant stay Son 15 9 



Conceit — some good conceit of thine jS'oji 26 7 
Finding the first conceit " 108 13 

unripe years did want conceit P P 4 9 
whose deep conceit is such "87 

As passing all conceit "88 

Conceited — the .... painter drew R L 1371 

on it had conceited characters L C 16 

Concealed — So of concealed sorrow V A 333 

of faults conceal'd Son 88 7 
the naked and concealed fiend L C 317 

Concealing — in blind .... night RL 675 

Vast sin-concealing chaos " 767 

Concord — If the true concord Son 8 5 

The wiry concord • " 128 4 

Concordant — Seemeth this concord- 
ant one P T 46 

Conclude — still concludes in woe V A 839 

she concludes the jsicture R L 1533 

They did conclude to bear " 1850 

Conclusion — tries a merciless .... " 1160 

Condemn'd — be condemn'd of trea- 
son VA 729 

The lily I condemned Son 99 6 

Conduct — Extinguishing his ... . RL 313 

Conduit — Like ivory conduits '' 1234 

Confess — truth I must confess V A 1001 

like him I must confess " 1117 

Let me confess Son 36 1 

Confess'd — So now I have confess'd " 134 1 

Confine — In whose confine immured " 84 3 
neither sting, knot, nor confine L C 265 

Confined — my verse to constancy con- 
fined Son 105 7 
forfeit to a confined doom "107 4 
to whom I am confined " 110 12 

Confirmed — I spurn at my confirm'd 

despite R L 1026 

constant and confirmed devil " 1513 

Conflict— the fighting conflict VA 345 

Confound — and her spirit confounds '' 882 

doth men's minds confound " 1048 

himself confounds, betrays R L 160 

doth confound and kill ' 250 

on her confounds his wits " 290 

that did my fame confound " 1202 

these many lives confounds " 1489 

and confounds him there Son 5 6 

sweetly chide thee, who confounds "87 
doth now his gift confound " 60 8 

In other accents do this praise con- 
found " 69 7 
that mine ear confounds " 128 4 

Confounded^Even so confounded V A 827 

confounded in a thousand fears R L 456 

Or state itself confounded Son 64 10 
Reason, in itself confounded P T 41 

Confounding — Against .... age's Son 63 10 

Confusion — with .... of their cries R L . ... 445 
whole is swallow'd in confusion " 1159 

Congealed — with his.... blood VA 1122 

mourning and congealed face R L 1744 

Congest— Must for your victory us 

all congest L C 258 

Conjure — conjures him by high al- 
mighty Jove RL 568 

Conquer — conquers where he comes VA 100 

Which I to conquer sought R L 4S3 

my hand shall conquer thee " 1210 

still conquer chastity P P 4 8 



CONQUERED 



64 



COPY 



Conquer'd — Thy never-conquer'd 

fort -B L 482 

in the rearward of a conquer'd 
■woe Son 90 6 

Conqueror — Her lips are conquerors VA 549 

Conquest — on her fair delight " 1030 

by the conquest satisfied R L 422 

make conquest of the stronger " 1767 

To be death's conquest Son 6 14 

How to divide the conquest " 46 2 

The coward conquest of a wretch's 
knife " 74 11 

Conscience — 'Tween frozen .... R L 247 

to know what conscience is Son 131 1 
conscience is born of love " 151 2 
No want of conscience " 151 13 
Consecrate — was consecrate to thee " 74 6 
Consecrated— batter'd down her con- 
secrated wall R L 723 

Consecration — All vows and conse- 
crations L C 263 

Consent — plausibly did give consent ii! i 1854 

Do in consent shake hands Son 28 6 

Consents bewitch'd, ere he desire L C 131 

Consider — Whenl .... every thing Son 15 1 

Consort — consort with ugly night VA 1041 

Consorted-^and his consorted lords RL 1609 

Conspirator — whispering.... " 769 

Conspire — thou stick'st not to ... . Son 10 6 

Constancy — my verse to ... . confined " 105 7 

The constancy and virtue " 117 14 

thy truth, thy constancy " 152 10 

Love and constancy is dead P T 22 

Constant — throng her constant woe VA 967 

like a constant and confirmed 

devil RL 1513 

And, constant stars Son 14 10 
none you, for constant heart " 53 14 
constant in a wondrous excellence " 105 G 
to thee I'll constant prove P P o 3 
Constraint — constrain'd with dread- 
ful circumstance R L 1703 

Construe — sense .... their denial " 324 

nill I construe whether P P 14 8 

Consulting- — . ... for foul weather V A 972 

Consume — Eot and .... themselves " 132 

that in air consumes R L 1042 

Consumed — Consumed with that 

which it was nourish'd by Son 73 12 

Consuniest — that thou .... thyself "92 

Contain — is that which it contains " 74 13 

what thy memory cannot contain " 77 9 

of me their reproach contains L C 189 

Contemn — shouldstcontemn methis P'^ 205 

Contend — meeting clouds contend " 820 

all forwards do contend Son 60 4 

Contending— with her tears VA 82 

to calm contending kings R L 939 

in skill-contending schools " 1018 

Thus art with arms contending PP 16 13 

Content — Forced to content V A 61 

full of cares, yet show'd content R L 1.503 

buriest thy content Son 1 11 

rebuked to my content " 119 13 

'gainst her own content L C 157 

For a sweet content P P 18 51 

CbnteK<— and alter their contents R L 948 

more bright in these contents Son 55 3 
reading what contents it bears L C 19 



Content — so breaking their contents L C 56 

Contented — I can be well contented VA 513 

With what I most enjoy contented 

least Son 29 8 

my well-contented day " 32 1 

But be contented " 74 1 

He is contented thy poor drudge " 151 11 

Contenting — . . . . but the eye alone V A 213 

Continual — witli continual kissing " 606 

with their continual motion R L 591 

by thy continual haste Son 123 12 

Continuance — tames the one R L 1098 

Contracted — contracted to thine own 

bright eyes Son 1 5 

when two contracted new " 56 10 

Contradict— If thou my love's desire 

do contradict RL 1631 

Contrary — These contraries such uni- 
ty do hold " 1558 

quite contrary I read Son 62 11 

Contrite — Her contrite sighs R L 1727 

Contrive — the herald will contrive " 206 

so to herself contrives L C 243 

Control — controls his thoughts un- 
just R L 189 

can affection's course control " .... 500 

should his use control " 1781 

control your times of pleasure Son 58 2 
lease of my true love control " 107 3 

stands least in thy control " 125 14 

Controlled — what he was .... with VA 270 

truth dimm'd and controll'd R L ...«. 448 

white fleece her voice controll'd " 678 

prescience she controlled still " 727 

Controlling — Controlling what he 

was controlled with V A 270 

all 'hues' in his controlling Son 20 7 

folly, doctor-like, controlling skill " 66- 10 
Controversy — controversy hence a 

question takes L C 110 

Convert — to water do convert R L 592 

desire converts to cold disdain " 691 

to store thou wouldst convert Son 14 12 

Converted — 'fore duteous, now con- 
verted are " 7 11 
converted from the thing it was " 49 7 
Convertcst — when thou from youth 

con veriest " 11 4 

Convertite — departs a heavy RL 743 

Convey — I may convey this troubled 

soul " 1176 

Convey'd — quickly is convey'd V a 1192 

Cony — earth-delving conies keep " 687 

Cool— Shall cool the heat " 190 

Cool shadow to his melting " 315 

quench'd in a cool well by Son 154 9 

water cools not love " 154 14 

Adon used to cool his spleen P P 6 6 

Cool'd — that must be cool'd V A 387 

Cooling— Cooling his hot face R L 682 

Co-partner— co-partuers in my pain " 789 

Cope — who shall cope him first V A 888 

Coped — never coped with stranger 

eyes R L 99 

Copesmate — copesmate of ugly Night " 925 

Copious — Their copious stories V A 845 

Copse — a copse that neighbours by " 259 

Copy — not let that copy die Son 11 14 

Let him but copy " 84 9 



CORAL 



65 



COWARD 



Coral — that sweet coral mouth VA 542 

Her coral lips B L 420 

coral cisterns filling " 1234 

Coral is far more red Son 130 2 

With coral clasps PP 20 14 

Corn — As corn o'ergrown by weeds R L 281 

Correct — to correct correction So7i 111 12 

Correction — to correct correction " 111 12 
Correspondence — . . . . with true sight " 148 2 
Corrupt — . ... by over-partial looks " 137 5 
corrupt my saint to be a devil " 144 7 

corrupt my saint to be a devil P P 2 7 

Corrupted — Which once corrupted R L 294 

spotted, spoil'd, corrupted " 1172 

Corrupted blood some watery token " 1748 

Corrupting — Jlyself corrupting, salv- 
ing thy amiss Son 35 7 
Corydon— Poor Corydon PP 18 52 

Cost— and oft that wealth doth cost R L 146 

cost of outworn buried age So^i 64 2 

prouder than garments' cost " 91 10 

Why so large cost " 146 5 

by that cost more dear L C 96 

painting, pain, and cost P P 13 12 

Costly — outward walls so costly gay Son 146 4 
Co-supreme — Co-supremes and stars 

of love P T 51 

Couch — from her betumbled couch R L 1037 

Concheth — Coucheth the fowl below " 507 

Could — there he could not die V A 246 

that I could not see " 440 

More I could tell " 805 

Could rule them both " 1008 

he could not die " 1060 

all could not satisfy R L 96 

Could pick no meaning " 100 

Nor could she moralize " 104 

could not stay him " 32? 

What could he see " ' 414 

could weeping purify " 685 

could not forestall their will " 728 

I could not put him back " 843 

I could prevent this storm " 966 

If tears could help " 1274 

itself could not mistrust " 1516 

her poor tongue could not speak " 1718 

no man could distinguish " 1785 

Then what could death' do Son 6 11 

If I could write the beauty " 17 5 

could with a backward look " 59 5 

what the old world could say " 59 9 

he could his looks translate " 96 10 

Could make me any " 98 7 

yet I none could see " 99 14 

it could so preposterously " 109 11 

I could not love you dearer " 115 2 

could not so much hold " 122 9 

Well could he ride L C 106 

For further I could say " 169 

Could 'scape the hail " 310 

could not hold argument P P 3 2 

none could look but beauty's queen '"4 4 
O never faith could hold "52 

Fare well I could not " 14 6 

the fair'st that eye could see " 16 3 

That nothing could be used " 16 10 

Alas, she could not help it " 16 12 

Scarce I could from tears refrain " 21 16 

Couldst— Unless thou .... return R L 961 

5 



Couldst — Since thou . . . .not defend R L 1034 

If thou couldst answer Son 2 10 

Counsel — counsel of their friends V A 640 

All this beforehand counsel R L 494 

Counsel may stop a while L C 159 

Take counsel of some wiser head PP 19 5 
Count — Shall sum my count Son 2 11 

When I do count the clock " 12 1 

count bad what I think good " 121 8 

thus far I count my gain " 141 13 

Counted — black was not counted fair " 127 1 

Countenance — should .... his sin R L 343 

your countenance fiU'd up his line Son 86 13 

Counterfeit— To the poor RL 1269 

And counterfeits to die " 1776 

than your painted counterfeit Son 16 8 
Adonis, and the counterfeit " 53 5 

Countermand — never .... mine eye R L 276 

Counterpart — such a . . . . shall fame Son 84 11 

Counting — Now counting best to be " 75 7 

Counting no old thing old " 108 7 

Countless — pay this countless debt V A 84 

Country — By all our country rights R L 1838 

Couple — Will couple my reproach " 816 

Couplement — Making a couplement Son 21 5 

Courage — Shows his hot courage V A 276 

In shape, in courage " 294 

stirs up a desperate courage " 556 

courage to the coward " 11.58 

Courageous— Courageous Eoman, do 

not steep thy heart RL 1828 

Courageously — Courageously to pluck 

him VA 30 

Course — And with his strong course " 960 

Holding their course " 1193 

his course doth let R L 328 

can affection's course control " 500 

against proportion'd course " 774 

O time, cease thou thy course " 1765 

nature's changing course Son 18 8 

Him in thy course " 19 11 

five hundred courses of the sun " 59 6 
to the course of altering things " 115 S 

what course, what stop he makes L C 109 

Courser — the lusty courser's rein V A 31 

Adonis' trampling courser " 261 

Let me excuse thy courser " 403 

Court — Of court, of city L C 53 

her noble suit in court did shun " 234 

Did court the lad PP 4 3 

Courtesy — They all strain courtesy VA 888 

villain court'sies to her low R L 1338 

Cover — Covers the shame " 357 

Though men can cover crimes " 1252 

that beauty that doth cover thee Son 22 5 
my bones with dust shall cover " 32 2 
doth cover every blot " 95 11 

Cover'd — The naked and concealed 

fiend he cover'd i C 3 17 

Coverlet — On the green coverlet R L 394 

Covet — Those that much covet " 1.34 

Covetous — For thou art covetous Son 134 6 

Coward — like a pale-faced coward V A 569 

Thy coward heart " 1024 

courage to the coward " 1158 

The coward captive vanquished R L 75 

The coward fights " 273 

Pale cowards, marching on " 1391 

The coward conquest Son 74 11 



COWARD-LIKE 



66 



CROW 



Coward-like — . . . . with trembling R L 231 

Coy — why art thou coy VA 96 

to my coy disdain " 112 

instead of love's coy touch R L 669 

Cozening — Cozening the pillow " 387 

Crabbed — Crabbed age and youth P P 12 1 

Crack'd — Crack'd many a ring L C 45 

Cradle — Lo, in this hollow cradle VA 1185 

Craft — False-creeping craft and per- 
jury R L 1517 

in his craft of will L C 126 

but an art of craft " 295 

When craft hath taught her P P 19 22 

Craggy — And all the craggy moun- 
tains yields " 20 4 

Cramp — Is plagued with cramps R L 856 

Crank — He cranks and crosses V A 682 

Cranny — vents and crannies of the 

place R L 310 

through every cranny spies " 1086 

Crave — what she did crave V A 88 

a beggar's orts to crave R L 985 

The cause craves haste " 1295 

the account of hours to crave Son 58 3 
more than I did crave P P 10 9 

I pardon crave of thee " 10 11 

Craved — I .... nothing of thee still " 10 10 

Crawl — Crawls to maturity Son 60 6 

Created — wert thou first created " 20 9 

Which eyes not yet created " 81 10 

Creating — Creating every bad a per- 
fect best " 114 7 

Creation — From the creation R L 924 

But heaven in thy creation Son 93 9 

Slandering creation with a false 
esteem " 127 12 

Creature — Pursue these fearful crea- 
tures VA 677 

'Tis he, foul creature " 1005 

henceforth no creature wear " 1081 

To creatures stern sad tunes R L 1147 

these pretty creatures stand " 1233 

Such harmless creatures " 1347 

A creeping creature " 1627 

From fairest creatures Son 1 1 

sweet favour or deformed'st crea- 
ture " 113 10 
One of her feather'd creatures " 143 2 
Fair creature kill'd too soon P P 10 7 

Credent— And credent soul L C ..... 279 

Credit — I credit her false-speaking 

tongue Son 138 7 

credit her false-speaking tongue PP 1 7 

Credulous — and yet too credulous VA 986 

The credulous old Priam R L 1522 

Creep — fearing to creep forth V A 1036 

dog creeps sadly thence R L 736 

halt, creep, cry out for thee " 902 

the little worms that creep " 1248 

see time how slow it creeps " 1575 

Creep in 'twixt vows Son 115 6 

Creeping — Which drives the creeping 

thief R L 305 

False-creeping craft and perjury " 1517 

A creeping creature " 1627 

Crept — a wandering wasp hath crept " 839 

Crest— his uncontrolled crest V A 104 

Upon his compass'd crest " 272 

High crest, short ears " 297 



Crest — from his bending crest V A 395 

When tyrants' crests and tombs Son 107 14 

Crest-wounding — , private scar R L 828 

Crew — and all his lordly crew " 1731 

Cried — and softly cried 'Awake " 1628 

Cried 'O false blood LC 52 

That it cried. How true a twain P T 45 

Cries — cries ' Fie, no more of love VA 185 

' Pity,' she cries " 257 

' For shame,' he cries " 379 

' Ay me !' she cries " 833 

owls' and wolves' death-boding 

cries R L 165 

with confusion of their cries " 445 

the poor lamb cries " 677 

Who nothing wants to answer her 

but cries " 1459 

dear daughter,' old Lucretius cries " 1751 

Answer'd their cries " 1806 

Cries to catch her Son 143 6 

Crime — Whose crime will hear R L 224 

art guilty of my cureless crime " 772 

Be guilty of my death, since of my 

crime " 931 

let his unrecalling crime " 993 

Though men can cover crimes " 1252 

one most heinous crime Son 19 8 

to pardon of self-doing crime " 58 12 

how once I suffer'd in your crime " 120 8 

wlio have lived for crime " 124 14 

Crinieful — this cursed .... night RL 970 

Crimson — 'Twixt crimson shame VA 76 

never let their crimson liveries 

wear " 506 

that the crimson blood RL 17.38 

Cripple — A .... soon can find a halt P P 19 10 

Critic — To critic and to flatterer 

stopped are Son 112 11 

Crooked — crooked, churlish, harsh in 

voice VA 134 

his crooked tushes slay " 624 

AVhose crooked beak threats R L 508 

crooked eclipses 'gainst his glory ■ 

fight Son 60 7 

his scythe and crooked knife " 100 14 

did hang in crooked curls L C 85 

Crop — bid thee crop a weed V A 946 

she crops the stalk " 1175 

the ploughman with increaseful 

crop R L 958 

Cross — I see what crosses " 491 

A thousand crosses keep them " 912 

the strong offence's cross Son 34 12 

lay on me this cross " 42 12 

One silly cross P P 18 13 

Cross — He cranks and crosses V A 682 

To cross the curious workmanship " 734 

cross him with their opposite per- 
suasion R L 286 

To cross their arms " 793 

cross Tarquin in his flight " 968 

is bent my deeds to cross Son 90 2 

Crossed — thus to be crossed " 133 8 

Crow — Out-stripping crows that 

strive VA 324 

The crow may bathe R L 1009 

A crow that flies Son 70 4 

The crow or dove " 113 12 

And thou treble-dated crow P T 17 



CROWN 



67 



DAME 



Crown — but to touch the crown R L 216 

now crown themselves assured Son 107 7 

But if store of crowns be scant P P 21 37 

Crowned — In thy parts do crowned 

sit Son 37 7 

wherewith being crown'd " 60 6 

with outward praise is crown'd " 69 5 

my niind being crown'd with you " 114 1 

Crowning — Crowning tlie present " 115 12 

Cruel — to ban her cruel foes R L 1460 

to thy sweet self too cruel Son 1 8 

despite his cruel hand " 60 14 

confounding age's cruel knife " 63 10 

rude, cruel, not to trust " 129 4 

beauties proudly make them cruel " 131 2 

thy cruel eye hath taken " 133 5 

Be wise as thou art cruel " 140 1 

Canst thou, cruel " 149 1 

cruel speeding P P 18 25 
Crush'd — injurious hand crush'd and 

o'er-worn Son 63 2 

Cry — Ceasing their clamorous cry V A 693 

she coasteth to the cry " 870 

the cry remaineth " 885 

This dismal cry " 889 

with my bootless cries Son 29 3 

Cry — ' O, pity,' 'gan she cry VA 95 

doth cry ' Kill, kill !' " 652 

twenty times cry so " 834 

creep, cry out for thee R L 902 

1 did begin to start and cry " 1639 

for restful death I cry Son 66 1 

still cry 'Amen " 85 6 

Where want cries some L C 42 

and cry ' It is thy last " 168 

now would she cry P P 21 13 

Crying— And fright her crying babe R L 814 

and my loud crying still Son 143 14 

Crystal— the crystal tears gave light F^ 491 

sweet lips and crystal eyne " 633 

The crystal tide " 957 

Both crystals, where they view'd " 963 

Through crystal walls R L 1251 

pierced with crystal eyes Son 46 6 

Of amber, crystal L C 37 

glazed with crystal gate " 286 

Cuckoo — Or hateful cuckoos hatch RL 849 

Cunning — Which cunning love V A 471 

the cunning hounds mistake their 

smell " 686 

with a cunning brow R L 749 

eyes this cunning want to grace 

their art Son 24 13 
What need'st thou wound with 

cunning " 139 7 

O cunning Love " 148 13 

Cup — to his palate doth prepare the 

cup " 114 12 

Cupid — The which by Cupid's bow VA 581 

Cupid laid by his brand Son 153 1 

Where Cupid got new fire " 153 14 

Curb— for curb or pricking spur VA 285 

Can curb his heat R L 706 

That we must curb it L C 163 

Cure— kiss each other, for this cure VA 505 

despite of cure, remain R L 732 

is woe the cure for woe " 1821 

Past cure I am Son 147 9 

a sovereign cure " 153 8 



Cure — But found no cure Son 153 13 

Came there for cure " 154 13 

0*re — my body's bane would cure 

thee VA 372 

it cannot cure his pain R L 861 

heals the wound and cures not the 

disgrace Son 34 8 

your pity is enough to cure me " 111 14 

cures all disgrace in me P P 3 8 

Cured — though none it ever cured R L 1581 

rank of goodness would by ill be 

cured Son 118 12 

Cureless— guilty of my crime R L 772 

Curious — the curious workmanship 

of nature VA 734 

do please these curious days Son 38 13 

seal'd to curious secrecy L C 49 

Cnrious-good — This is too R L 1300 

Curl— sable curls all silver'd o'er Son 12 4 

did hang in crooked curls L C 85 

Curled — to tear his curled hair RL 981 

Current — the current of her sorrow " 1569 

With brinish current L C 284 

Curse — The destinies will curse thee 

for this stroke VA 945 

Shall curse my bones R L 209 

To make him curse " 970 

Teach me to curse him " 996 

and curse my fate Son 29 4 

blessings add a curse " 84 13 

Cursed— this cursed crimeful night R L 970 

Fortune, cursed fickle dame P P 18 15 

Cursed-blessed — their fortune R L 866 

Curst— Finding their enemy to be so 

curst VA 887 

Curtain — the curtains being close RL 367 

Even so, the curtain drawn " 374 

Curtal- My curtal dog P P 18 29 

Curvets — curvets and leaps V A 279 

Cut— never cut from memory Son 63 11 

Cynthia— Cynthia for shame ob- 
scures VA 728 

Cy therea — Sweet Cytherea, sitting by 

a brook PP 4 1 
Cytherea, all in love forlorn "63 

Daflf'd — my white stole of chastity I 

daff'd L C 297 

dalf 'd me to a cabin P P 14 3 

Daily — streams that pay a daily debt Pi 649 

doth daily draw my sorrows Son 28 13 

Come daily to the banks " 56 11 

the sun is daily new and old " 76 13 

Dainty — Dainties to taste VA 164 

Daisy — an April daisy on the grass R L 395 

Dale — on mountain or in dale VA 232 

mountain-spring that feeds a dale R L 1077 

hills and valleys, dales and fields P P 20 3 
Dallied — Grief dallied with, nor law 

nor limit knows R L 1120 

Dally — dally, smile, and jest VA 106 

he doth but dally R L 554 

Damask — with .... dye to grace her P P 7 5 
Damask'd — I have seen roses .... Son 180 5 

Dame — peer to such a peerless dame P i 21 

welcomed by the Eoman dame " 51 

couldst not defend thy loyal dame " 1034 

the dame and daughter die " 1477 

Awake, thou Boman dame " 1628 



DAME 



68 



DAY 



Dame — no dame hereafter living iJ L 1714 

Fortune, cursed fickle dame PP 18 15 

thine eye hath chose the dame " 19 1 

Damm'd — voice .... up with woe R L 1661 

Damned— imposthumes, grief, and 

damn'd despair V A 743 

more black and damned L C 54 

Damp — With rotten damps ravish the 

morning air R L 778 

Damsel— Unto the silly damsel P P 16 8 

Dance — learn'd to sjiort and dance V A 105 

Dance on the sands " 148 

Dancing — with those dancing chips Son 128 10 

Dandling — still'd with dandling V A 562 

Danger — or what great .... dwells " ....*. 206 

his danger by thy will " 639 

Danger deviseth shifts " 690 

leadeth on to danger " 788 

sundry dangers of his will's obtain- 
ing . RL 128 

The dangers of his loathsome en- 
terprise " 183 

Such danger to resistance " 1265 

Dangerous — from the .... year V A 508 

Dank— As the dank earth weeps RL 1130 

Dapper — Like a dive-dapper V A 86 

Dardan — from the strand of DardanP Z/ 1436 

Dare — dares not be so bold V A 401 

which no encounter dare " 676 

I dare not say " 805 

and dare not stay " 894 

She dares not look R L 458 

She dares not thereof make dis- 
covery " 1814 

Then may I dare to boast Son 26 13 

Nor dare I chide * " 57 5 

Nor dare I question " 57 9 

I dare not be so bold " 131 7 

Darest— thou .... do such outrage R L 605 

What darest thou not " 606 

Daring — engirt with daring infamy " 1173 

Not daring trust the oflHce PP 15 4 

Dark — heavy, dark, disliking eye V A 182 

'tis dark, and going I shall fall " 719 

Now of this dark night " 727 

in dark obscurity " 760 

thro' the dark laund " 813 

in the dark she lay " 827 

Into the deep-dark cabins " 1038 

from their dark beds " 1050 

From earth'.s dark womb R L 549 

Through the dark night he stealeth " 729 

dark harbour for defame " 768 

Some dark, deep desert " 1144 

in the dreadful dead of dark mid- 
night " 1625 

are bright in dark Son 43 4 

what dark days seen " 97 3 

black as hell, as dark as night " 147 14 

drives away dark dreaming night PP 15 8 

Darken— To .... her whose light RL 191 

Darkening — Darkening thy power Son 100 4 
Darkly— And, darkly bright " 43 4 

Darkness — burnt out, in ... . lies V A 1128 

dim darkness doth display R L 118 

canopied in darkness sweetly lay " 398 

In darkness daunts them " 462 

would they still in darkness be " 752 

Looking on darkness Son 27 8 



Darksome — in that .... prison R L 379 

Darling — sliake the buds of May Son 18 3 

Dart— Thine eye darts forth VA 196 

she darts as one on shore " 817 

hut thy false dart " 941 

not Death's ebon dart " 943 

might dart their injuries &>re 139 12 

Dash — Some loathsome dash R L 206 

Date — An expired date " 26 

date of never-ending woes " 935 

date from cancell'd destiny " 1729 

beauty's doom and date Son 14 14 

hath all too short a date " 18 4 

youth and thou are of one date " 22 2 

to outlive long date " 38 12 

Beyond all date " 122 4 

Our dates are brief " 123 5 

Dated— And thou treble-dated crow P T 17 

Dateless — hid in death's .... night Son 30 6 

A dateless, lively heat " 153 6 

Daughter — dearth of daughters V A 754 

beldam daughters of her daughter P i 953 

the dame and daughter die " 1477 

Daughter, dear daughter " 1751 

for daughter or for wife " 1792 

'My daughter,' and 'my wife " 1804 

'My daughter,' and 'my wife " 1806 

It was a lording's daughter PP 16 1 

Daunt — In darkness daunts them R L 462 

Day — A summer's day will seem V A 23 

So shall the day seem night " 122 

tired in the mid-day heat " 177 

My day's delight is past " 380 

now is turn'd to day " 481 

His day's hot task " 530 

sun by day, and her by night " 732 

melts with the mid-day sun " 750 

a stormy day, now wind " 965 

stars ashamed of day " 10.32 

silly lamb, that day " 1098 

day should yet be light " 1134 

shall rock thee day and night " 1186 

in her vanity prison stows the day P i 119 

and wretched, hateful days " 161 

open to adorn the day " 399 

she never may behold the day " 746 

' For day,' quoth she " 747 

the jealous Day behold that face " 800 

to the tell-tale Day " 806 

grooms are sightless night, kings 

glorious day " 1013 

Revealing day through every cran- 
ny spies " 108S 

day hath nought to do " 1092 

thou sing'st not in the day " 1142 

ere the break of day " 1280 

Into so bright a day " 1518 

treasure of thy lusty days Son 2 6 

he reeleth from the day " 7 10 
thebraveday sunk in hideous night " 12 2 

stormy gusts of winter's day " 13 11 

To change your day of youth " 15 12 

compare thee to a summer's day " 18 1 

my daj's should expiate " 22 4 

Lo, thus, by day my limbs " 27 13 

When day's oppression " 28 3 
But day by night and night by day " 28 4 

I tell the day, to please him " 28 9 

But day doth daily draw " 28 13 



DAY 



6.^^ 



DEAR 



Day — at break of day arising Son 29 11 

survive my well-contented day " 32 1 

promise such a beauteous day " 34 1 

do please these curious days " 38 13 

For all the day they view " 43 2 

To the clear day '-' 43 7 

in the living day " 43 10 

All days are nights " 43 13 

And nights bright days " 43 14 

the wits of former days " 59 13 

with beauty of thy days " 62 14 

wreckful siege of battering days " 65 6 

In days long since, before these last " 67 14 

the map of days outworn " 68 1 

the ambush of young days " 70 9 

the twilight of such day " 73 5 

pine and surfeit day by day " 75 13 

of the time-bettering days " 82 8 

tells the story of thy days " 95 5 

what dark days seen " 97 3 

in growth of riper days "102 8 

now behold these present days " 106 13 

I must each day say o'er " 108 6 

the day or night " 113 11 

do tie me day by day " 117 4 

my days are past the best " 138 6 

follow'd it as gentle day " 145 10 

brightness doth not grace the day " 150 4 

Hot was the day P P 6 7 

Pack night, peep day ; good day, of 

night " 15 17 

was victor of the day " 16 13 

On a day, alack the day " 17 1 

twice desire ere it be day " 19 17 

As it fell upon a day " 21 1 

Daylight — she doth welcome daylight " ^15 7 

DazzletU— That dazzleth them B L 377 

Dazzling' — That her sight dazzling V A 1064 

Dead — thou thyself art dead " 172 

image dull and dead " 212 

Struck dead at first " 250 

As if the dead " 292 

believing she is dead " 467 

If he be dead " 937 

to strike him dead " 948 

For he being dead " 1019 

And, beauty dead " 1020 

he is not dead " 1060 

behold two Adons dead " 1070 

But he is dead " 1119 

That, thou being dead " 1134 

Since thou art dead " 1135 

the dead of night P L 162 

pure thoughts are dead and still " 167 

as one in dead of night " 449 

and reason beat it dead " 489 

And in thy dead arms " 517 

the other being dead " 1187 

My shame so dead " 1190 

Thou dead, both die " 1211 

■who cannot abuse a body dead " 1267 

imprison'd in a body dead " 1456 

the dreadful dead of dark midnight " 1625 

to bear dead Lucrece thence " 1850 

by lacking have supposed dead Son 31 2 

As interest of the dead " 31 7 

When in dead night " 43 11 

And steal dead seeing " 67 6 

golden tresses of the dead " 68 5 



Dead — Ere beauty's dead fleece Son 68 8 

mourn for me when I am dead " 71 1 

my body being dead " 74 10 

breathers of this world are dead " 81 12 

that struck me dead " 86 6 

was beauty's summer dead " 104 14 

ladies dead, and lovely knights " 106 4 

outward form would shew it dead " 108 14 
all the world besides methinks are 

dead " 112 14 

Making dead wood more blest " 128 12 

And Death once dead " 146 14 

broken, dead within an hour P P 13 6 

As flowers dead lie wither'd " 13 9 

our love is lost, for Love is dead " 18 48 

King Pandion he is dead " 21 23 

Love and constancy is dead P T 22 

For these dead birds sigh a prayer " 67 

Dead-killinf? — a cockatrice' dead- 
killing eye R L 540 

Deadly — deadly bullet of a gun V A 461 

gives a deadly groan " .... 1044 

disdain and deadly enmity RL 503 

light and lust are deadly enemies " 674 

kill'd with deadly cares " 1593 

with this deadly deed " 1730 

Deaf— Or were I deaf VA 435 

But will is deaf R L 495 

And trouble deaf heaven Son 29 3 
Deal — My shepherd's pipe can sound 

no deal PP 18 27 

Dealing — and use good dealing V A 514 

Dear — were he not my dear friend R L 234 

my kinsman, my dear friend " 237 

Where their dear governess " 443 

For Collatine's dear love " 821 

Well, well, dear Collatine " 1058 

Dear lord of that dear jewel " 1191 

my lord, my love, my dear " 1293 

Unmask, dear dear " 1602 

Dear husband, in the interest " 1619 

Dear lord, thy sorrow " 1676 

Daughter, dear daughter " 1751 

dear ray love, you know Son 13 13 

dear repose for limbs " 27 2 

new wail my dear time's waste " 30 4 

I think on thee, dear friend " 30 13 

Hath dear religious love " 31 6 

And our dear love " 39 6 

and the dear heart's part " 46 12 

for a prize so dear " 48 14 

After my death, dear love " 72 3 

thou art too dear for my possessing " 87 1 

Take heed, dear heart " 95 13 

lose their dear delight " 102 12 

my love or thy dear merit " 108 4 

sold cheap what is most dear " 110 3 

Pity me then, dear friend " 111 13 

thy dear love to score " 122 10 

If my dear love " 124 1 

to my dear doting heart " 131 3 

Dear heart, forbear to glance " 139 6 

and thy dear virtue hate " 142 1 

for whose dear love I rise and fall " 151 14 

by that cost more dear L C 96 

terror and dear modesty " 202 

each stone's dear nature " 210 

Dowland to thee is dear P P 8 5 

O yes, dear friend " 10 11 



DEARER 



70 



DECEASED 



Dearer— lost a clearer thing than life R L 687 

which was the dearer " 1163 

A dearer birth than this Son 32 11 

I could not love you dearer " 115 2 

Dearest — by fortune's dearest spite " 37 3 

Thou, best of dearest " 48 7 

your dearest love to call " 117 3 

Dearly — I loved her dearly " 42 2 

Dear-purchased— your own .... right " 117 6 

Dearth — she faint with dearth V A 545 

dearth of daughters " 754 

of dearths, or season's quality Son 14 4 

pine within and suifer dearth " 146 3 

Deatli— And so, in spite of death VA 173 

it is a life in death " 413 

life was death's annoy " 497 

death was lively joy " 498 

having writ on death " 509 

I thy death should fear " 660 

I prophesy thy death " 671 

Swear Nature's death " 744 

exclaims on Death " 930 

thus chides she Death " 932 

not Death's ebon dart " 948 

Death is not to blame " 9^2 

sweet Death, I did but jest " 997 

With Death she humbly " 1012 

To wail his death " 1017 

death doth my love destroy " 1163 

reft from her by death " 1174 

Though death be adjunct, there's 

no death R L 133 

The death of all " 147 

triumph in the map of death " 402 

And death's dim look " 403 

lived in death and death in life " 406 

In bloody death and ravishment " 430 

Wounding itself to death " 466 

living death and pain perpetual " 726 

Grim cave of death " 769 

Be guilty of my death " 931 

desperate instrument of death " 1038 

To clear this spot by death " 1053 

Till life to death acquit " 1071 

'Tis double death to drown in ken 

of shore " 1114 

death reproach's debtor " 1155 

when death takes one " 1161 

cause of my untimely death " 1178 

in my death I murder " 1189 

This plot of death " 1212 

Of ijresent death, and shame " 1263 

By that her death " 1264 

The adulterate death of Lucrece " 1645 

Shows me a bare-boned death " 1761 

Shall rotten death make conquest " 1767 

to be revenged on her death " 1778 

the death of this true wife " 1S41 

Then what could death do Son 6 11 

To be death's conquest " 6 14 

rage of death's eternal cold " 13 12 
Nor shall Death brag thou wan- 

der'st in his shade " 18 11 
Then look I death my days should 

expiate " 22 4 

hid in death's dateless night " 30 6 

When that churl Death " 32 2 

Sinks down to death " 45 8 

Of their sweet deaths " 54 12 



Death — 'Gainst death and all-oblivi- 
ous enmity Son 55 9 
This thought is as a death " 64 13 
for restful death I cry " 66 1 
After my death, dear love " 72 3 
Death's second self " 73 8 
your memory death cannot take " 81 3 
eat him up to death " 99 13 
and death to me subscribes " 107 10 
when their deaths be near " 140 7 
So Shalt thou feed on Death " 146 13 
And Death once dead " 146 14 
Desire is death which physic did 

except " 147 8 

by death's sharp sting P P 10 4 

That the lover, sick to death " 17 7 

Death is now the phosnix' nest P T 56 

Death-bed— As the death-bed Son 73 11 
Death-boding— and wolves' death- 
boding cries R L 165 

Death-divining — Be the death-di- 
vining swan P T 15 

Deathsman — As slanderous .... RL 1001 

Death-worthy — seem death-worthy 

in thy brother " 635 

Debarr'd — the benefit of rest Son 28 2 

Debate — in his inward mind he doth 

debate R L 185 

Debate when leisure serves " 1019 

debate with angry swords " 1421 

against myself I'll vow debate Son 89 13 

Debated — debated, even in my soul R L 498 

Debaters — serves with dull .... " 1019 

Dcbateth — Time .... with Decay Son 15 11 

Debating— fear, avaunt! , die RL 274 

Debt — pay this countless debt VA 84 

that the debt should double " 521 

pays the hour his debt R L 329 

that pay a daily debt " 649 

The barren tender of a poet's debt Son S3 4 

Debtor— that to bad debtors lends R L 964 

and death reproach's debtor " 1155 

a friend came debtor for my sake Son 134 11 

Decay — with thy life's decay RL 517 

sweet chastity's decay " 803 

with decay of things " 947 

age and cold decay Son 11 6 

a house fall to decay " 13 9 

Time debateth with Decay " 15 11 

fortify yourself in your decay " 16 3 

itself confounded to decay " 64 10 

my love was my decay " 80 14 

a satire to decay " 100 11 

on the doubts of my decay P P 14 4 

Decay — and when that decays R L 713 

will wither, and his sap decay " 1168 

in mine own love's strength seem 

to decay Son 23 7 

so strong, but Time decays " 65 8 

even with my life decay " 71 12 

Decay'd — as soon decay'd and done R L 23 

gracious numbers are decay'd Son 79 3 

Decease — fearing my love's decease VA 1002 

children pre-decease progenitors R L 1756 

the riper should by time decease Son 1 3 

after yourself 's decease " 13 7 

after their lord's decease " 97 8 

Deceased — lines of thy deceased lover " 32 4 

hang more praise upon deceased I " 72 7 



DECEIT 



71 



DEFEND 



Deceit— Thou look'st not like deceit RL 585 

To hide deceit " 1507 

Saw how deceits were gilded i C 172 

Deceitful— Conceit so compact R L 1423 

Deceive — do not deceive me " 585 

thy sweet self dost deceive Son 4l 10 
so sweetly doth deceive " 39 12 
as it best deceives L C 306 

Deceived- with painted grapes VA 601 

Like a deceived husband Son 93 2 

mine eye may be deceived " 104 12 

Deceivest— if thou thyself deceivest " 40 7 

Deceiving — the deceiving harmony V A 781 

And most deceiving " 1156 

December— old December's bareness Son 97 4 

Decide— To 'cide this title " 46 9 

Deck — And decks with praises RL 108 

to deck his oratory " 815 

Declines — fair from fair sometime 

declines Son 18 7 

Declined — With head declined R L 1661 

My low-declined honour " 1705 

Decrease — at height decrease Son 15 7 

Decree — quiver'st thou at this ... . RL 1030 

heaven in thy creation did decree Son 93 9 
change decrees of kings " 115 6 

Decrepit — Teaching decrepit age to 

tread the measures V A 1148 

As a decrepit father Son 37 1 

Dedicated — The dedicated words " 82 3 

Deed — Let fair humanity abhor the 

deed R L 195 

with so black a deed " 226 

shows like a virtuous deed " 252 

tears ensue the deed " 502 

This deed will make thee " 610 

time for charitable deeds " 908 

with deeds degenerate " 1003 

My life's foul deed " 1208 

To talk in deeds " 1348 

Whose deed hath made her " 1566 

The lechers in their deed " ...... 1637 

with this deadly deed " 1730 

or grief help grievous deeds " 1822 

and ransom all ill deeds Son 34 14 

To see his active child do deeds of 

youth " 37 2 
into my deeds to pry " 61 6 
they measure by thy deeds " 69 10 
is bent my deeds to cross " 90 2 
turn sourest by their deeds " 94 13 
of my harmful deeds " 111 2 
my deeds must not be shown " 121 12 
save in thy deeds " 131 13 
the very refuse of thy deeds " 150 6 
by him became his deed L C Ill 

Deem — but dull and slow she deems RL 13.36 

but fairer we it deem Son 54 3 

Deemed — and for true things deem'd " 96 8 
wliioh is so deemed " 121 3 

Deep — Then love's deep groans V A 377 

but deep desire hath none " 389 

Sad pause and deep regard R L 277 

Deep woes roll forward " 1118 

And with deep groans " 1132 

Some dark, deep desert " 1144 

Till after a deep groan " 1276 

And that deep torture " 1287 

Deep sounds make lesser noise " 1329 



Deep — Show'd deep regard RL 1400 

By deep surmise of others' detri- 
ment " 1579 

which deep impression bears " 1712 

bail it from the deep unrest " 1725 

The deep vexation " 1779 

Wherein deep policy did him dis- 
guise " 1815 

And that deep vow " 1847 

And dig deep trenches Son 2 2 

have full as deep a dye " 54 5 

upon your soundless deep " 80 10 

praise the deep vermillion " 98 10 

For that deep wound " 133 2 

I have sworn deep oaths of thy 
deep kindness " 152 9 

arguments and question deep L C 121 

whose deep conceit is such P P 8 7 

And I in deep delight " 8 11 

Deep in the thigh " 9 11 

My sighs so deep " 18 31 

Deep-brain'd — And .... sonnets L C 209 

Deep-dark — Into the deep-dark cab- 
ins of her head VA 1038 

Deep-drenched — deep-drenched in a 

sea of care R L 1100 

Deeper — O, deeper sin " 701 

Deepest — My deepest sense Son 120 10 

Deep-green — The emerald LC 213 

Deeply — upon her back deeply dis- 

tress'd VA 814 

Passion on passion deeply is re- 
doubled " 832 

Deep-sore— hearts' wounding " 432 

Deep-sunken — thine own .... eyes Son 2 7 

Deep-sweet — Ear's music VA 432 

Deep-wounded — with a boar PP 9 10 

Deer — thou shalt be my deer VA 231 

Then be my deer " 239 

sorteth with a herd of deer " 689 

As the poor frighted deer R L 1149 

And stall'd the deer P P 19 2 

Deface— winter's ragged hand deface Son 6 1 

nor none falser to deface her PP 1 6 

Defaced — soul's fair temple is ... . RL 719 

by Time's fell hand defaced Son 64 1 

Defame — dark harbour for defame R L 768 

minstrels tuning my defame " 817 

thou livest in my defame " 1033 

Defeat — true love that doth my rest 

defeat Son 61 11 

Defeated — me of thee defeated " 20 11 

Defeature — with impure defeature VA 736 

Defect — But having no defects " 1.38 

torments us with defect RL 151 

God wot, it was defect " 1345 

see thee frown on my defects Son 49 2 

shall not be thy defect " 70 1 

doth worship thy defect " 149 11 

Defence — 'gainst Time's scythe can 

make defence " 12 13 

making no defence " 89 4 

my o'er-press'd defence " 139 8 

As passing all conceit needs no de- 
fence PP 8 8 

Defend — can so well defend her V A 472 

the growing rose defends R L 492 

defend thy loyal dame " 1034 

suppose thou dost defend me " 1684 



DEFENDANT 



72 



DESIRE 



Defendant — the defendant doth that 

plea deny Son 46 7 

Defiled— by him defiled R L 787 

let forth my foul-deflled blood " 1029 

With outward honesty, but yet de- 
filed " 1545 

Defiling— vows were ever brokers to 

defiling L C 173 

Define — And for myself mine own 

worth do define Son 62 7 

Deflower — quoth he ' I must .... R L 348 

Deformed'st — or creature Son 113 10 

Defunctive — That .... music can P T 14 

Defy — Thy registers and thee I both 

defy Son 123 9 

Age, I do defy thee P P 12 11 

Defying— Faith's defying " 18 6 

Degenerate — with deeds degenerate K i 1003 

Deified — new lodged and newly . ... L C 84 

Deign — If thou wilt this favour V A 15 

Delay — haste is mated with delays " 909 

the glove, that did delay him R L 325 

unhallow'd haste her words delays " 552 

many accents and delays " 1719 

Delay'd — Her audit, though delay'd Son 126 11 

Delicious — His taste delicious R L 699 

Delight — better'd with a more .... VA 78 

My day's delight is past " 380 

aim at like delight " 400 

on her fair delight " 1030 

in that sky of his delight R L 12 

shame that follows sweet delight " 357 

her life, her world's delight " 385 

marks thee for my earth's delight " 487 

chides his vanish'd, loathed delight " 742 

false slave to false delight " 927 

sweet hours from love's delight Son 36 8 

decrepit father takes delight " 37 1 

to heart's and eye's delight " 47 14 

or pursuing no delight " 75 11 

Or more delight than hawks " 91 11 

but figures of delight " 98 11 

lose their dear delight " 102 12 

is there more delight " 130 7 

And I in deep delight PP 8 11 

thus dissembled her delight " 19 16 

DeiiffJU— Do I delight to die VA 496 

others, they think, delight " 843 

by nature they delight R L 697 

joy delights in joy Son 8 2 

Delights to peep " 24 12 

stories to delight his ear P P 4 5 
Deliglited — with thy tongue's tune 

delighted Son 141 5 

Delightful— and high plain VA 230 

Delighting — and ravishment .... R L 430 

Deliver— and she delivers it " 1333 

For it no form delivers to the heart Son 113 5 

Deliver'd — deliver'd from thy brain " 77 11 

Delve — And delves the parallels " 60 10 
Delving — where earth-delving conies 

keep VA 687 

Demand — Demand of him L C 149 

Demeanour — he by dumb demeanour 

seeks to show R L 474 

Demure — doth give ... good-morrow " 1219 

Denial — but denial and reproving " 242 

He in the worst sense construes 

their denial " 324 



Denied — mayst thou be denied Son 142 14 

Denote — then love doth well denote " 148 7 

Deny — If thou deny, then force R L 513 

deny that thou bear'st love Son 10 1 

doth that plea deny " 46 7 

And deny himself for Jove P P 11 17 

Denying — Love's denying " 18 5 

Depart — that he may deparl" VA 578 

He thence departs R L 743 

if thou shouldst depart Son 6 11 

As easy might I from myself depart " 109 3 
Departest — from that which thou . . . . " 11 2 
Depend — it depends upon that love " 92 4 
on thy humour doth depend '• 92 8 

truth and beauty on my love de- 
pends " 101 3 

that do on mine depend L C 274 

Depending — words are now .... R L 1615 

Deprive — to deprive dishonour'd life " 1186 

Deprived — which thou hast here .... " 1752 

Derive — my knowledge I derive Soil 14 9 
Derived — Thou wast not to this end 

from me derived R L 1755 

Descant — To descant on the doubts P P 14 4 

Descant'st — on Tereus descant'st R L 1134 

Descended — with slow-sad gait .... " 1081 

descended her sheaved hat L C 31 

Descending — the heat of this de- 
scending sun VA 190 

Describe — Describe Adonis, and the 

counterfeit So7i 53 5 

Descried — . ... in men's nativity R L 538 

Description — I see descriptions of 

the fairest wights Son 106 2 

Desert — Some deep dark desert R L 1144 

Desert — with your most high deserts Son 17 2 
knowledge of mine own desert " 49 10 
As to behold desert " 66 2 

than mine own desert " 72 6 

your great deserts repay " 117 2 

Where thy desert may merit praise PP 19 27 
Deserve — Deserves the travail Son 79 6 

may deserve to pitied be " 142 12 

deserve not punishment P P 3 4 

Deserved — deserved a greater fee V A 609 

deserved thy beauty's use Son 2 9 

Deservest — which thou .... alone " 39 8 
Deserving — where is my deserving " 87 6 

Design — a meritorious fair design R L 1692 

soft audience to my sweet design L C 278 

Desire — desire doth lend her force V A 29 

but frosty in desire " 36 

and his high desire " 276 

approach of sweet desire " 386 

deep desire hath none " 389 

or life desire " 496 

Now quick desire " 547 

Love in his desire " 653 

desire sees best of all " 720 

desire's foul nurse " 773 

drops of hot desire " 1074 

unto himself was his desire " 1180 

trustless wings of false desire RL 2 

toss'd between desire and dread " 171 

by brain-sick rude desire " 175 

Lucrece must I force to my desire " 182 

or were he not my dear friend, this 

desire " 234 

Desire my pilot is " 279 



DESIRE 



73 



DIALECT 



Desire — By reprobate desire iZ L 300 

which fond desire doth scorch " 314 

not to foul desire " 574 

His true respect will prison false 

desire " 642 

This hot desire " 691 

Drunken Desire must vomit " 703 

or rein his rash desire " 706 

Feeble Desire, all recreant " 710 

Desire doth fight witli Grace " 712 

But if the like the snow-white 

swan desire " 1011 

check'd his son's desire " 1490 

to answer his desire " 1606 

If thou my love's desire do contra- 
dict " 1631 

should be thy chief desire Son 10 8 
The first my thought, the other my 

desire " 45 3 

with my desire keep pace " 51 9 
Therefore desire, of perfect'st love 

being made "51 10 

times of your desire " 57 2 

make them born to our desire " 123 7 

Desire is death " 147 8 

And so the general of hot desire " 154 7 

Of pensive and subdued desires L C 219 

Desire — From fairest creatures we de- 
sire increase Son 1 1 
Dost thou desire my slumbers "61 3 
nor smell, desire to be invited " 141 7 

privileged by age, desires to know LC 62 

When he again desires her " 66 

ere he desire, have granted " 131 

And twice desire ere it be day P P 19 17 

Desired — but strongly he desired R L 415 

to set a form upon desired change Son 89 6 

the help of bath desired " 153 11 

nor being desired yielded L C 149 

Desiring — Desiring this man's art Son 29 7 

Despair — grief and damn'd despair V A 743 

as one full of despair " 955 

Despair, and hope " 988 

Despair to gain doth traffic RL 131 

another white despair Son 99 9 

of comfort and despair " 144 1 

of comfort and despair P P 2 1 

Despair — of time's help to despair R L 983 

For, if I should despair Son 140 9 

Despairing— Hecuba beheld R L 1447 

Desperate^as desperate in his suit V A .... 336 

stirs up a desperate courage " 556 

theirs whose desperate hands " 765 

and in a desperate rage R L 219 

She, desperate, with her nails " 739 

some desperate instrument " 1038 

I desperate now approve Son 147 7 
Despise — looking scornfully he doth 

despise R L 187 

that loves what they despise Son 141 3 

thy service to despise " 149 10 

Despised — ...., rheumatic, and cold VA 135 

I am not lame, poor, nor despised Son 37 9 

Time's spoils despised everywhere " 100 12 

but despised straight " 129 5 

Despising — myself almost despising " 29 9 

Despite — in high heaven's despite V A 731 

despite of fruitless chastity " 751 

boasted blushes in despite R L 65 





732 




1026 


3 


12 


19 


13 


44 


3 


60 


14 


123 


14 


141 


4 



Despite — despite of cure remain R L 
at my confirm'd despite " 

Despite of wrinkles Son 

despite thy wrong " 

For then despite of space " 

despite his cruel hand " 

despite thy scythe and thee " 

Who, in despite of view " 

Despitefully— despitefully I mean to 

bear thee R L 670 

Destined— The destined ill L C 156 

Destiny — she bribed the Destinies V A 733 

The Destinies will curse thee " 945 

date from cancell'd Destiny R L 1729 

Destitute — turrets .... and pale " 441 

Destroy — each other did destroy V A 346 

If thou destroy them not " 760 

doth ray love destroy " 1163 

who will the vine destroy R L 215 

I purpose to destroy thee " 514 

the city to destroy " 1369 

the user so destroys it Son 9 12 

Detain — can no more detain him V A 577 

She may detain, but not still keep Son 126 10 

Determinate— in thee are all " 87 4 

Determination — Find no ... . "13 6 

Determined — by their verdict is .... " 46 11 

Determining — which way to fly jB£ 1150 

Detest — made herself herself detest " 1566 

Detriment — surmise of others' ... . " 1579 

Device — but your device in love V A 789 

from them no device can take R L 5.35 

Lo, this device was sent me L C 232 

Devil — adored by this devil R L 85 

profaned in such a devil " 847 

a hideous, shapeless devil " 973 

the semblance of a devil " 1246 

constant and confirmed devil " 1513 

Such devils steal effects " 1555 

my saint to be a devil Son 144 7 
my saint to be a devil P P 2 7 
Devise — Devise extremes beyond ex- 
tremity R L 969 

devise some virtuous lie Son 72 5 

poets can in praise devise " 83 14 

Devised — yet when they have .... " 82 9 

Deviseth — Danger deviseth shifts V A 690 

Devour — Devours his will R L 700 

What virtue breeds iniquity de- 
vours " 872 

but that which doth devour " 1256 

devour her own sweet brood Son 19 2 

Devour'd — Not that devour'd, but 

that which R L 1256 

Devouring — . ... all In haste V A 57 

lived by foul devouring R L 700 

Devouring Time, blunt thou Son 19 1 

Dew — morning's silver-melting dew P Z 24 

resembling dew of night " 396 

relenting dew of lamentations " 1829 

Dew-bedabbled — the..... wretch VA, 703 

Dew'd — So they were dew'd " 66 

Dewy — weep like the dewy night RL 1232 

dried up the dewy morn P P & X 

Dexterity — quick bearing and R L 1389 

Dial — which stop the hourly dial " 327 

Thy dial how thy precious minutes Son 77 2 

by thy dial's shady stealth " 77 7 

Dialect— He had the dialect L C 125 



DIAL-HAND 



74 



DID 



Dial-hand— beauty like a . . . . Son 104 9 

Dialogued— And dialogued for him L C 132 

Diamond— The diamond, why, 'twas 

beautiful " 211 

Dian— Make modest Dian VA 725 

A maid of Dian's Son 153 2 
Diapason — with deep groans the di- 
apason R L 1132 

Did — did he raise his chin VA 85 

what she did crave " 88 

Never did passenger in summer's 

heat " 91 

in battle ne'er did bow " 99 

did hotly overlook them " 178 

so did this horse " 293 

he did not lack " 299 

each other did destroy " 346 

her eyes did rain " 360 

did honey passage yield " 452 

he did think to reprehend " 470 

love did wittily prevent " 471 

When he did frown " 571 

my joints did tremble " 642 

where did I leave " 715 

late did wonder " 748 

So did the merciless " 821 

did feed her sight " 822 

tears did lend and borrow " 961 

she did follow " 975 

I did but jest " 997 

I did but act " 1006 

he did see his face " 1109 

did not whet bis teeth " 1113 

never did he bless " 1119 

Collatine unwisely did not let R L 10 

did him peculiar duties " 14 

disdainfully did sting " 40 

some untimely thought did insti- 
gate " 43 

No comfortable star did lend his 

light " 164 

fondly I did dote " 207 

fear did make her colour rise " ..... 257 

her husband's welfare she did hear " 263 

the glove that did delay him " 325 

What did he note " 415 

as his hand did scale " 440 

I did entertain thee " 596 

did I entertain him " 842 

he did complain him " 845 

When Tarquin did " 917 

who did thy stock pollute " 1063 

that did my fame confound " 1202 

Suchdangerto resistance did belong " 1265 

did make him more amazed " 1356 

peasants did so well resemble " 1392 

from his lips did fly " 1406 

some mermaid did their ears entice " 1411 

no semblance did remain " 1453 

Lucrece swears he did her wrong " 1462 

fond Paris, did incur " 1473 

as Priam him did cherish " 1546 

So did I Tarquin, so my Troy did 

perish " 1547 

where you did fulfil " 1635 

act of lust, and so did kill " 16.36 

I did begin to start and cry " 1639 

That blow did bail it " 1725 

I often did behold " 1758 



Did— I did give that life R L 1800 

policy did him disguise " 1815 

at him, did his words allow " 1845 

They did conclude to bear " 1850 

Komans plausibly did give consent " 1854 

Those hours that with gentle work 

did frame Son 5 1 
Which erst from heat did canopy 

the herd " 12 6 

their parts of me to thee did give " 31 11 

early morn did shine " 33 9 

my foot did stand " 44 5 

the wretch did know " 50 7 

where they did proceed " 76 8 

I alone did call upon thy aid " 79 1 

you did painting need " 83 1 

you did exceed " 83 3 

you did impute " 83 9 
That did my ripe thoughts in my 

brain inhearse " 86 3 

heaven in thy creation did decree " 93 9 

Nor did I wonder " 98 9 

I with these did play " 98 14 

The forward violet thus did I chide " 99 1 

on thorns did stand " 99 8 
her mournful hymn did hush the 

night " 102 10 
That did not better for my life pro- 
vide " 111 3 
I did strive to prove " 117 13 
To bitter sauces did I frame my 

feeding " 118 6 

sorrow which I then did feel " 120 2 

Love's own hand did make " 145 1 
Straight in her heart did mercy 

come " 145 5 

which physic did except " 147 8 

fire did quickly steep " 153 3 

Oft did she heave her napkin L C 15 

As they did battery " 23 

in her threaden fillet still did bide " 33 

in his fair parts she did abide " 83 

did hang in crooked curls " 85 

did enchant the mind " 89 

Did livery falseness in a pride of 

truth " 105 

still did wake and sleep " 123 

did in the general bosom " 127 

that did his picture get " 134 

that did in freedom stand " 143 

Yet did I not as some my equals did " 148 

Till now did ne'er invite " 182 

that so their shame did find " 187 

sonnets that did amplify " 209 

his invised properties did tend " 212 

that burning lungs did raise " 228 

noble suit in court did shun " 234 

and did thence remove " 237 

which did no form receive " 241 

did her force subdue " 248 

his watery eyes he did dismount " 281 

and mine did him restore " 301 

did win whom he would maim " 312 

from his heart did fly " 325 

did not the heavenly rhetoric PP Z 1 
Did court the lad "43 
unripe years did want conceit "49 

she hotter that did look " 6 7 
did I see a fair sweet youth "99 



DID 



75 



DISDAIN 



Did — thou left'st me more than I did 

crave PP 10 9 

how god Mars did try her " 11 3 
her lips on his did act the seizure " 11 10 

sweetly did she smile " 14 7 

that love with love did fight " 16 5 

did bear the maid away " 16 14 
Beasts did leap, and birds did sing " 21 5 
Treesdidgrow, andplantsdidspring" 21 6 

Everything did banish moan " 21 7 

between them love did shine P T 33 

Didst— 0, thou didst kill me VA 499 

thou didst name the boar " 641 

Didst thou not mark " 643 

thou didst teach the way R L 630 

Why didst thou promise Son 34 1 

thou didst forsake me " 89 1 

whence didst thou steal " 99 2 

thou didst bequeath to me P P 10 12 

Die — ^there he could not die VA 246 

Do I delight to die " 496 

and die forsworn " 726 

like a glutton dies " 803 

who lives and must not die " 1017 

he could not die " 1060 

shall I die by drops " 1074 

And die, unhallow'd thoughts R L 192 

Yea, though I die " 204 

with trembling terror die " 231 

fear, avaunt! debating, die " 274 

threats if he mounts he dies " 508 

The patient dies " 904 

For if I die my honour lives " 1032 

I need not fear to die " 1052 

thereon fall and die " 1139 

To live or die " 1154 

Yet die I will not " 1177 

Thou dead, both die " 1211 

the dame and daughter die " 1477 

here Priam dies " 1485 

the judge is robb'd, the prisoner dies " 1052 

yet let the traitor die " ,1686 

The old bees die " 1769 

Thy father die " 1771 

to die with her a space " 1776 

beauty's rose might never die Son 1 2 

Die single, and thine image dies " 3 14 

thou issueless shalt hap to die "93 
Thou shouldst print more, not let 

that copy die " 11 14 
And die as fast as they see others 

grow " 12 12 

they in their glory die " 25 8 

Die to themselves " 54 11 

Save that, to die I leave my love " 66 14 

to aU the world must die " 81 6 

happy to die " 92 12 
Though to itself it only live and die " 94 10 

Which die for goodness " 124 14 

A flower that dies when first P P 13 3 

Died — And died to kiss his shadow V A 162 

but died unkind " 204 

But now I died " 498 

lived and died with him " 1080 

in that darksome prison died R L 379 

But since he died Son 32 13 

lived and died as flowers do " 68 2 

Diest — Unlook'd on, diest unless " 7 14 

Dieted — ay, dieted in grace L C 261 



Difference — leaves out difference Son 105 8 

our drops this difference bore L C 300 

Different— Of different flowers Son 98 6 

the dialect and different skill L C 125 

Dig — His snout digs sepulchres V A 622 

And dig deep trenches Son 2 2 

Digestion — in digestion souring R L 699 

Dignified — they basely dignified " 660 

and therein dignified Son 101 4 

Dignify — so dignifies his story " 84 8 

Dignity — proud of such a dignity R L 437 

The bravest weed outbraves his 
dignity Son 94 12 

Digression — digression is so vile R L 202 

Diligence — done with speedy .... " 1853 

Dim — dim darkness doth display " 118 

And death's dim look " 403 

In his dim mist " 548 

And wipe the dim mist " 643 

Dim register and notary " 765 

in her dim element " 1588 

fair fresh mirror, dim and old " 1760 

Diminish'd — Beany jot diminish'd VA 417 

Dimm'd — torch .... and eontroll'd R L 448 

is his gold complexion dimm'd Son 18 6 

Dimple — appears a pretty dimple V A 242 

Dimpled — her snow-white .... chin R L 420 

Dint — snow takes any dint V A 354 

Dire — The dire imagination " 975 

And the dire thought R L 972 

war and dire events V A 1159 

Directed — are bright in dark .... Son 43 4 

Direction — by their own direction V A 216 

Directly — yet not directly tell Son 144 10 

yet not directly tell P P 2 10 

Direful — stern and .... god of war V A 98 

exclaiming on the direful night R L 741 

Dirge — Begins the sad dirge " 1612 

Disabled — by limping sway disabled (Sbra 66 8 
Disarm'd — by a virgin hand disarm'd " 154 8 
Disbursed — And all my fame that 

lives disbursed be R L 1203 

Discern — wherein it shall discern " 619 

Discharge — . . . . one word of woe " 1605 

Discharged — from .... cannon fumes " 1043 

Disciplined— Who ay, dieted LC 261 

Discloses — their masked buds .... Son 54 8 

Discolour'd — and lean .... cheek R L 708 

Discontent — servile to all discon- 
tents VA 1161 

in shows of discontent R L 1580 

thus attired in discontent " 1601 

blow of thralled discontents Son 124 7 

her poor infant's discontent " 143 8 

By discontent so breaking L C 56 

Thy discontent thou didst be- 
queath PP 10 12 
Discord — Melodious discord, heavenly 

tune VA 431 

My restless discord loves no stops R L 1124 

Discourse — Bid me discourse VA 145 

My thoughts and my discourse Son 147 11 

Discovery — discovery of her way VA 828 

She dares not therefore make dis- 
covery R L 1314 

Disdain— in a dull disdain VA 33 

Servile to my coy disdain " 112 

smiles as in disdain " 241 

bondage in disdain " 394 



DISDAIN 



76 



DIVIDE 



Disdain — and such disdain VA 501 

will hold thee in disdain " 761 

disdain and deadly enmity JB L 503 

hang their heads at this disdain " 521 

converts to cold disdain " 691 

torments me with disdain Son 132 2 

with too much disdain " 140 2 

was wounded with disdain PP 16 11 

Disdain — dishonour to disdain him It L 844 

Disdain to him disdained scraps " 987 

disdains the tillage Son 3 6 
Disdained — eyes disdain'd the woo- 
ing VA 358 

disdained scraps to give R L 987 

Disdaineth — my love no whit .... Son 33 13 

Disdainfully— did sting R L 40 

Disease — longer nurseth the disease Son 147 2 

Diseased— To be diseased " 118 8 

For men diseased " 154 12 

Disgrace— love but to disgrace it VA 412 

disgrace me half so ill Son 89 5 

As I'll myself disgrace " 89 7 

May time disgrace " 126 8 

Disgrace — blush at her own disgrace R L 479 

The same disgrace which they 

themselves behold " 751 

lies martyr'd with disgrace " 802 

unseen shame! invisible disgrace " 827 

Of her disgrace " 1320 

When, in disgrace with fortune Son 29 1 

to west, with this disgrace " 33 8 

and cures not the disgrace " 34 8 

and doing me disgrace " 103 8 

if not lives in disgrace " 127 8 

cures all disgrace in me P P 3 8 

Disgraced — he stands disgraced R L 718 

in them doth stand disgraced " 1833 

perfection wrongfully disgraced Son 66 7 

Disguise — policy did him disguise R L 1815 

Disguised — with chaps and wrinkles 

were disguised " 1452 

Dislievell'd — with long .... hair V A 147 

in my dishevell'd hair R L 1129 

Dishonour— O foul dishonour to my 

household's grave " 198 

To privilege dishonour " 621 

Black lust, dishonour, shame " 654 

For it had been dishonour " 844 

Dislionoured — my body so ... . " 1185 

to deprive dishonour'd life " 1186 

Disjoin'd — till breathless he ... . VA 541 

Disliking — dark, disliking eye " 182 

Dismal — This dismal cry " 889 

Dismay'd — her senses all dismay'd " 896 

and will not be dismay'd R L 273 

Dismiss — Dismiss your vows V A 425 

Dismount — his watery eyes he did 

dismount L C 2S1 

Disorder — Disorder breeds by heat- 
ing VA 742 

Dispatch — and makes all swift .... Son 143 3 

Dispensation — with good thoughts 

makes dispensation R L 248 

Dispense— never will dispense " 1070 

1 thus far can dispense " 1279 

with the foul act dispense " 1704 

with my neglect I do dispense Son 112 12 

Disperse — under thee their poesy 

disperse " 78 4 



Dispersed — in thy sea dispersed R L 658 

The dispersed air " ..... 1805 

Displacest— and displacest laud " 887 

Display— dim darkness doth display " 118 

Display'd — his gaudy banner is ... . " 272 

Disposed— to set me light Son 88 1 

Disposing — To the disposing V A 1040 

Disposition — with noble disposition'P Z 1695 

Dispraise — Cannot dispraise but in a 

kind Son 95 7 
Disputation— graceless holds he dis- 
putation R L 246 

made a theme for disputation " 822 

Holds disputation with each thing " 1101 

Dissemble — the boar, not to ... . VA 641 

Dissembled— thus her delight P P 19 16 

Dissembled with an outward show " 19 38 

Dissension — And set dissensioii V A 1160 

Dissentious — Dissentious Jealousy " 657 

Dissolve— Would in thy palm dissolve " 144 

dissolves with tempering " 565 

Dissolved — For stones to water R L 592 

Dissolution — frost hath dissolution " 355 

Dissuade— one foolish heart Son 141 10 

Distain — silver-shining queen he 

would distain RL 786 

Distained — her tear-distained ej'e " 1586 

Distance — Injurious distance should 

not stop Son 44 2 

With safest distance L C 151 

But kept cold distance " 237 

Distance and no space, was seen P T 30 

Distant — And comely-distant sits hei C 65 

Distempor'd — a sad guest Son 153 12 

Distempering — gentle love VA 653 

Distill— by verse distills your truths /Son. 54 14 

Distillation — summer's distillation "59 

Distill'd-But flowers distill'd " 5 13 

ere thou be distill'd "62 

Distill'd from limbecks " 119 2 

Distilling — with such .... showers VA 66 

Distinct — Two distincts, division 

none P T 27 

Distinguish — what he said R L 1785 

Distract — Their distract parcels L C 231 

Distractedly — sight .... commix'd " 28 

Distraction — In the distraction Son 119 8 

Distress — Distress likes dumps R L 1127 

where all distress is stell'd " 1444 

distress and dolour dwell'd " 1446 

Distress'd — upon her back deeply 

distress'd VA 814 

her heart, poor citizen! distress'd R L 465 

Disturb — stealing in, .... the feast VA 450 

Disturb his hours of rest R L 974 

Disturbed — with disturbed mind VA 340 

From sleep disturbed R L 454 

Disturbing — where love reigns, dis- 
turbing Jealousy V A 649 

Ditty— a woeful ditty " 836 

welcome daylight with her ditty PP 15 7 
there sung the dolefuH'st ditty " 21 11 

Dive-dapper — Like a dive-dapper V A 86 

Divert — Divert strong minds Son 115 8 

Diverted — Sometime diverted their 

poor balls L C 24 

Divide— from her breast it doth ... . RL 1737 

How to divide the conquest Son 46 2 
with his hearing to divide L C 67 



DIVIDED 



77 



DO 



Divided — ^let us divided live Son 

Dividing — their present fall by this 

dividing iZ L 

Divination — fear doth teach it ... . VA 
Divine — that were divine " 

that which is divine H L 

beholds, as more divine 

the other made divine 

but yet like prayers divine Son 108 

Buy terms divine " 146 

Divining— look'd but with eyes " 106 

Be the death-divining swan P T 

Division — Two distincts, .... none 

Saw division grow together 
Divorce — Hateful divorce of love V A 
Do — to do a goddess good 

do her intendments break 

this I do to captivate 

hard heart do steel it 

Do I delight to die 

Do summon us to part 

Her arms do lend 

Do surfeit by the eye 

to do with such foul iiends 

air and water do abate 

What should I do 

Then do they spend 

Nay, do not struggle 

so do thy lips 

themselves do slay 

You do it for increase 

As caterpillars do 

Do burn themselves 

Swelling dugs do ache 

thoughts do seldom dream R L 

so then we do neglect 

sparks of fire do fly 

bids them do their liking 

Do tell her she is dreadfully beset 

do I mean to place him 

do not then ensnare me 

do not deceive me 

stones dissolved to water do convert 

put on his shape to do him shame 

darest do such outrage 

eyes do learn, do read, do look 

Men's faults do seldom to them- 
selves appear 

do presently abuse it 

have to do with thee 

to do me good 

hath nought to do 

would do it good 

husband, do thou take 

to do her husband wrong 

would do me good 

do it leisurely 

These contraries such unity do hold 

If thou my love's desire do contra- 
dict 

through his lips do throng 

do not take away 

Do wounds help wounds 

do not steep thy heart 

wliat could death do Son 

do offend thine ear ' 

They do but sweetly chide thee ' 

All in one, one pleasing note do sing ' 

Wheii I do count the clock ' 



551 

670 

730 

193 

291 

1164 

5 

11 

11 

15 

27 

42 

982 

28 

222 

281 

375 

496 

534 

539 

602 

638 

654 

667 

695 

710 

724 

765 

791 

798 

81D 

875 

87 

152 

177 

434 

444 

517 

584 

585 

592 

597 

605 

616 

633 

864 
911 
1028 
1092 
1117 
1200 
1264 
1274 
1349 
1558 

1631 

1783 

1796 

1822 

1828 

11 

6 

7 

12 
1 



Do — of thy beauty do I questio n make Son 
beauties do themselves forsake 
from the stars do I my judgement 

pluck 
wherefore do not you a mightier 

way 
rough winds do shake the darling 

buds 
do whate'er thou wilt. 
Him in thy course untainted do 

allow 
Yet do thy worst, old Time 
how I do love tliee 
which the blind do see 
Do in consent shake hands 
when clouds do blot the heaven 
blots that do with me remain 
my bewailed guilt should do thee 

shame 
But do not so 
To see his active child do deeds 

of youth 
Entitled in thy parts do crowned 

sit 
If my slight Muse do please these 

curious days 
I do forgive thy robbery 
then do mine eyes best see 
when dreams do show thee me 
that time do I ensconce me 
How heavy do I journey 
Sweet roses do not so 
and do not kill 
what should I do but tend 
Nor services to do 
Though you do any thing 
So do our minutes hasten 
all forwards do contend 
shadows like to thee do mock my 

sight 
for myself mine own worth do 

define 
do I now fortify 
as flowers do now 
accents do this praise confound 
Do not so much as my poor name 

rehearse 
to do more for me 
or none, or few, do hang 
Thus do I pine 
do I not glance aside 
when I of you do write 
And do so, love 
For how do I hold thee 
The injuries that to myself I do 
should do it wrong 
And do not drop in for 
Ah, do not, when 
do not leave me last 
But do thy worst 
what a happy title do I find 
will do none 
That do not do the thing they 

most do show 
They rightfully do inherit 
But do not so 
Then do thy office 
0, for my sake do you with Fortune 

chide 



18 


3 


19 


6 


19 


11 


19 


13 


26 


13 


27 


8 


28 


6 


28 


10 


36 


3 


36 


10 


36 


13 



37 



38 


13 


40 


9 


43 


1 


43 


14 


49 


9 


50 


1 


54 


11 


56 


7 


57 


1 


57 


4 


57 


14 


60 


2 


60 


4 



63 


9 


68 


2 


69 


7 


71 


11 


72 


6 


73 


2 


75 


13 


76 


3 


80 


1 


82 


9 


87 


5 


88 


11 


89 


11 


90 


4 


90 


5 


90 


9 


92 


1 


92 


11 


94 


1 


94 


2 


94 


5 


96 


13 


01 


13 



DO 



78 



DOST 



Do — -vvrith my neglect I do dispense Son 112 12 
Those lines that I before have writ 

do lie " 115 1 

all bonds do tie me " 117 4 

that I do change " 123 1 

This I do vow " 123 13 

Do I envy those " 128 5 

do witness bear " 131 11 

I do believe her " 138 2 

Yet do not so " 139 13 

do not press " 140 1 

I do not love thee " 141 1 

Or, if it do, not from those lips " 142 5 

two spirits do suggest me " 144 2 

Do I not think on thee " 149 3 

I do call my friend " 149 5 

that I do fawn upon " 149 6 

do I not spend " 149 7 

merit do I in myself " 149 9 

what others do abhor " 150 11 

I do betray " 151 5 

do I accuse thee " 152 5 

sometimes they do extend L C 25 

What's sweet to do, to do will aptly 

find " 88 

their sickly radiance do amend " 214 

that do on mine depend " 274 

and yet do question make " 321 

What I should do again " 322 

I do believe her P P 1 2 

two spirits do suggest me still "22 

do not love that wrong " 5 13 
Age, I do abhor thee, youth, I do 

adore thee " 12 9 

Age, I do defy thee " 12 11 

All thy fellow birds do sing " 21 25 

if Fortune once do frown " 21 47 

Doctor-like— folly, doctor-like, con- 
trolling skill Son 66 19 

Doe — Like a milch doe VA 875 

a poor unseasonable doe -B L 581 

Dog_No dog shall rouse thee VA 240 

the dogs exclaim aloud " 886 

He, like a thievish dog P L 736 

My curtal dog, that wont to have 

play'd PP 18 29 

Doing— pardon of self-doing crime Son 58 12 

Doing thee vantage " 88 12 

and doing me disgrace " 103 8 

by the well-doing steed L C 112 

Doleful— rings out the doleful knell R L 1495 

wether's bell rings doleful knell PP 18 28 

to see my doleful plight " 18 33 

Dolefull'st— sung the .... ditty " 21 11 

Dolour — distress and dolour dwell'd P £ 1446 

To think their dolour " 1582 

Done— life were done V A 197 

Her words are done " 254 

done me double wrong " 429 

wasted, thaw'd, and done " 749 

ere summer half be done " 802 

and are never done " 846 

hath done thee wrong " 1005 

as soon decay'd and done R L 23 

hath done her beauty wrong " 80 

That done, some worthless slave " 515 

A little harm done " 528 

' Have done,' quoth he " 645 

That done, despitefully " 670 



Done— to do what's done by night R L 1092 

that hath done him wrong " 1467 

might be done to me " 1623 

done with speedy diligence " 1853 

what good turn eyes for eyes have 

done Son 24 9 

at that which thou hast done " 35 1 

first in character was done " 59 8 

griefs have done their spite " 90 10 

Now all is done " 110 9 

of a beauty spent and done L C 11 

Harm have I done to them " 198 

Doom — in this shameful doom R L 672 

himself he sounds this doom '' 717 

to the general doom " 924 

to this advised doom " 1849 

and beauty's doom and date Son 14 14 

out to the ending doom " 55 12 

forfeit to a confined doom " 107 4 

even to the edge of doom " 116 12 

in giving gentle doom " 145 7 

Door — double-lock the door V A 448 

The threshold grates the door R L 306 

The doors, the wind, the glove " 325 

unto the chamber door " 337 

the door he opens wide " 359 

a press of people at a door " 1301 

Dost — why dost abhor me V A 138 

thou dost survive " 173 

why dost thou feel it " 373 

whereon thou dost lie " 646 

as thou dost lend " 864 

what dost thou mean " 933 

at random dost thou hit " 940 

Dost thou drink tears " 949 

If thou dost weep for grief R L 1272 

that thou dost trembling stand " 1599 

suppose thou dost defend me " 1684 

Thou dost beguile the world Son 3 4 

why dost thou spend "41 

why dost thou abuse "45 

why dost thou use "47 
Thou of thyself thy sweet self dost 

deceive " 4 10 

And dost him grace " 28 10 

While thou dost breathe "38 2 
thou thyself dost give invention 

light " 38 8 

Thou dost love her " 42 6 

where thou dost stay " 44 4 

thou in him dost lie " 46 5 

Dost thou desire " 61 3 

thou dost wake elsewhere " 61 13 

thou dost common grow " 69 14 

thou dost review " 74 5 

thou dost but mend the style " 78 11 

and dost advance " 78 13 

thou thyself dost pay " 79 14 

whom thou dost hate " 89 14 
How sweet and lovely dost thou 

make the shame " 95 1 

dost thou thy sins inclose " 95 4 

So dost thou too " 101 4 
What thou dost foist upon us that 

Isold " 123 6 

Dost hold Time's fickle glass " 126 2 

what dost thou to mine eyes " 137 1 
If thou dost seek to have what 

thou dost hide " 142 13 



DOST 



79 



DOTH 



Dost — ^Why dost thou pine within Son 146 3 
Dost thou upon thy fading man- 
sions spend " 146 6 

witness dost thou bear LC 53 

Dote — and old men dote VA 837 

how fondly I did dote It L 207 

And dotes on what he looks " 497 

is pleased to dote Son 141 4 

whereon my false eyes dote " 148 5 

made the blossoms dote L C 235 

Doted — on that he firmly doted R L 416 

Dotcth — franticly she doteth V A 1059 

Doth — desire doth lend her force " 29 

Now doth she stroke his cheek, 

now doth he frown " 45 

Poth quench the maiden " 50 

she doth anew begin " 60 

As the spring doth yearly grow " 141 

The sun doth burn my face " 186 

doth little harm " 195 

doth provoke a pause " 218 

how doth she now for wits " 249 

doth urge releasing " 256 

courser doth espy " 261 

vapours doth he send " 274 

swiftly doth forsake him " 321 

Love's fire doth assuage " 334 

as the wolf doth grin " 459 

The mellow plum doth fall " 527 

doth pitch the price " 551 

Her face doth reek and smoke, her 

blood doth boil " 555 

She doth protest " 581 

she doth prove " 597 

when he doth fret " -621 

Doth call himself " 650 

doth cry ' Kill, kill " 652 

Sometime false doth bring " 658 

on his back doth lie " 663 

Doth make them droop " 666 

doth make my faint heart " 669 

fear doth teach it " 670 

alarums he doth hear " 700 

brier his weary legs doth scratch " 705 

doth always fresh remain " 801 

Who doth the world " 857 

shining star doth borrow " 861 

doth make him shake " 880 

captain once doth yield " 893 

doth labour to expel " 976 

one doth flatter thee " 989 

she doth extenuate " 1010 

humbly doth insinuate " 1012 

in shade doth sit " 1035 

doth men's minds confound " 1048 

doth so surprise " 1049 

doth she hang her head " 1058 

The sun doth scorn you, and the 

wind doth hiss " 1084 

death doth my love destroy " 1163 

Beauty itself doth of itself per- 
suade B L 29 

doth challenge that fair field " 58 

The coward captive vanquished 

doth yield " 75 

that praise which Collatine doth 

owe " 82 

she doth express " Ill 

Doth yet in his fair welkin " 116 



Doth — dim darkness doth display E 

with life's strength doth fight 

doth Tarquin lie revolving 

Despair to gain doth traffic oft 

oft that wealth doth cost 

Doth too too oft 

he doth premeditate 

he doth debate 

he doth despise 

the fear doth still exceed 

doth confound and kill 

doth so far proceed 

so their pride doth grow 

with fond desire doth scorch 

his course doth let 

to pray he doth begin 

o'er this sleeping soul doth Tar- 
quin stay 

heedfully doth view 

doth his tongue begin 

the world doth threat 

some gentle gust doth get 

he doth but dally 

she doth begin 

that doth bend his bow 

then most doth tyrannize 

This forced league doth force 

Self-will himself doth tire 

Desire doth fight with Grace 

her flesh doth tear 

doth open lay 

water that doth eat in steel 

fellowship in woe doth woe assuage 

impurity doth not pollute 

the tiger that doth live by slaughter 

one that by alms doth live 

doth me no right 

all sorrow doth compare 

For mirth doth search 

the salve doth make the wound 
ache more 

sun dotli melt their snow 

she doth give demure good-morrow 

the earth doth weep 

that which doth devour 

that it doth behold 

a part of woe doth bear 

with bashful innocence doth hie 

a little while doth stay 

burning Troy doth bear 

sad tales doth tell 

she their looks doth borrow 

she doth lament 

doth quake with cold 

hot-burning fire doth dwell 

Sinon's tears doth flatter 

And time doth weary time 

Doth in her poison'd closet yet 
endure 

the eye that doth behold his haste 

and through her wound doth fly 

from her breast, it doth divide 

still doth red abide 

The one doth call her his 

in them doth stand disgraced 

He doth again repeat 

gives nothing but doth lend Son 

where every eye doth dwell 

fairly doth excel 



118 
124 
127 
131 
146 
174 
183 
185 
187 
229 
250 
251 
298 
314 
328 
342 

423 
454 
470 
547 
549 
554 
567 
580 
676 
689 
707 
712 
739 
747 
755 
790 
854 
955 
986 
1027 
1102 
1109 

1116 
1218 
1219 
1226 
1255 
1326 
1327 
1341 
1364 
1474 
1496 
1498 
1500 
1556 
1557 
1560 
1570 

1659 

1668 

1728 

1787 

1749 

1793 

1833 

1848 

3 

2 

4 



DOTH 



80 



DOVE 



Doth— Doth homage to hia new-ap 
pearing sight 
in the world doth spend " 
for ornameBt doth use " 
his fair doth rehearse " 
that doth cover thee " 
Which in thy breast doth live " 
But day doth daily draw " 
And night doth nightly make " 
buried love doth live " 
Yet doth it steal svreet hours " 
that this shadow doth such sub- 
stance give " 
Which time and thoughts so sweet- 
ly doth deceive " 
who doth hence remain " 
even so doth she abuse me " 
shadows doth make bright " 
sleep in sightless eyes doth stay " 
My heart doth plead " 
doth that plea deny " 
each doth good turns " 
with sighs himself doth smother " 
then my eye doth feast " 
in his thoughts of love doth share 

a part " 

Doth teach that ease " 
same groan doth put this in my 

mind " 

which the robe doth hide " 

The one doth shadow " 

bounty doth appear " 

much more doth beauty " 
that sweet ornament which truth 

doth give " 

sweet odour which doth in it live " 

to you it doth belong " 
Time that gave doth now his gift 

confound " 

Time doth transfix the flourish " 

that doth my rest defeat " 

a map doth Nature store " 

world's eye doth view " 

slander doth but prove " 

vice the sweetest buds doth love " 

night doth take away " 

on the ashes of his youth doth lie " 

every word doth almost'- " 

sick Muse doth give " 

thy poet doth invent " 

beauty doth he give " 

what in thee doth live " 

which he doth say " 

spirit doth use your name " 

proudest sail doth bear " 

doth wilfully appear " 
he upon your soundless deep doth 

ride " 

modern quill doth come too short " 

what worth in you doth grow " 
penury within that pen doth dwell " 

as a dream doth flatter " 

on thy humour doth depend " 

my life on thy revolt doth lie " 

doth thy beauty grow " 

Doth spot the beauty " 

beauty's veil doth cover " 

knife ill used doth lose his edge " 

ear that doth thy lays esteem " 



Son 7 



21 


3 


21 


4 


22 


5 


22 


7 


28 


13 


28 


14 


31 


9 


36 


8 



37 10 



39 


12 


39 


14 


42 


7 


43 


5 


43 


12 


46 


5 


46 


7 


47 


2 


47 


4 


47 


5 


47 


8 


50 


3 


50 


13 


52 


10 


53 


10 


53 


11 


54 


1 


54 


2 


54 


4 


58 


11 


60 


8 


60 


9 


61 


11 


68 


13 


69 


1 


70 


5 


70 


7 


73 


7 


73 


10 


76 


7 


79 


4 


79 


7 


79 


10 


79 


12 


79 


13 


80 


2 


80 


6 


80 


8 


80 


10 


83 


7 


83 


8 


84 


5 


87 


13 


92 


8 


92 


10 


93 


13 


95 


3 


95 


11 


95 


14 


100 


7 



102 
104 
104 
109 
112 
113 
113 
113 
114 
114 
114 
115 
123 
132 
132 
134 
145 
147 
148 
149 
150 
151 
151 



LC . 
PP 



Doth — owner's tongue doth publish Son 102 

Philomel in summer's front doth 
sing 

Ah, yet doth beauty like a 

which methinks still doth stand 

in thy breast doth lie 

pity doth the impression fill 

Doth part his function 

which it doth latch 

holds what it doth catch 

Or whether doth my mind 

palate doth prepare 

and doth first begin 

that which still doth grow 

what we see doth lie 

Doth half that glory 

mourning doth thee grace 

bond that him as fast doth bind 

Doth follow night 

which doth preserve the ill 

love doth well denote 

my best doth worship 

brightness doth not grace the day 

My soul doth tell my body 

at thy name doth point out 

landlord which doth owe them 

that on this earth doth shine 

doth ravish human sense " 

My heart doth charge the watch " 
Doth cite each moving sense " 

For she doth welcome daylight " 
A woman's nay doth stand for 

nought " 

He with thee doth bear a part " 

the anthem doth commence P T 

To eternity doth rest " 

Doting — now must doting Tarquin 
make R L 

from thy doting eyne " 

doting father of his fruit " 

Had doting Priam check'd " 

as she wrought thee, fell a-doting Son 
to ray dear doting heart 
Double — done me double wrong 
that the debt should double 
with a thousand doubles 
'Tis double death to drown 
given grace a double majesty 
Nor double penance 
this double voice accorded 
Single nature's double name 
Doubled — each several limb is ... . 
Double-lock — double-lock the door 
Double-vantago — . . . . me 

Doubt — hounds are driven to doubt VA 

Who, overcome by doubt " 

T shall not know, but live in doubt P P 2 
on the doubts of my decay " 14 

I ne'er know, but live in doubt Son 144 

wavering stood in doubt L C 

Doubtful— a vain and doubtful good PP 13 

A doubtful good, a gloss " 13 

Long was the combat doubtful " 16 

Doubting — Doubtin g the filching age Son 75 

doubting of the rest " 115 

Dove — than doves or roses are V A 

Two strengthless doves " 

doves that sit a-billing " 

yokes her silver doves " 



20 
131 



VA 



RL . 
Son 

LC . 
PT . 

VA . 



Son 88 



11 
3 
7 

11 

4 

7 

9 

140 

10 
6 
2 
3 
7 

42 
56 
21 
58 

155 

643 

1064 

1490 

10 

3 

429 

521 

682 

1114 

8 

12 

3 

39 

1067 

448 

12 

692 

891 

13 

4 

13 

97 

1 

5 

5 

6 

12 

10 

153 

366 

1190 



DOVE 



81 



DROWN 



Dove — From Venus' doyes doth chal- 
lenge R L 58 

The dove sleeps fast " 360 

The crow or dove, it shapes them Son 113 12 
Mild as a dove P P 1 2 
than her milk-white dove "93 
To the phoenix and the dove P T 50 

Dowland— Dowland to thee is dear P P S 5 

Dovn— o'er the downs V A 677 

The stain upon his silver down R L 1012 

His phanix down began L C 93 

Dou-Ji — along as he was down VA 43 

down Adonis sits " 325 

down she kneels " 350 

she flatly falleth down " 463 

She sinketh down " 593 

Pluck down the rich " 1150 

straight be strucken down R L 217 

batter'd down herconseorated wall " 723 

that down thy cheeks are raining " 1271 

What wit sets down " 1299 

Wagg'd up and down " 1406 

Sinks down to death Son 45 8 

I can set down a story " 88 6 

Book both my wilfulness and er- 
rors down " 117 9 
Sets down her babe " 143 3 

And down I laid L C 4 

So slides he down " 64 

■weighs down the airy scale " 226 

The golden bullet beats it down P P 19 30 

Down-razed — lofty towers I see .... Son 64 3 

Doivnriffht — fell I not downright V A 645 

Dowinvard — . ... eye still looketh " 1106 

current downward flow'd apace L C 284 

Dowry — the dowry of a lawful bed R L 938 

Drain'd — When hours have drain'd 

his blood Sm 63 3 

Draiv — draw me through the sky V A 153 

That she will draw " 552 

draws up her breath " 929 

To draw the cloud R L . ... 371 

Draw not thy sword " 626 

and back the same grief draw " 1673 

Nor draw no lines there Son 19 10 

They draw but what they see " 24 14 

daily draw my sorrows " 28 13 

Drawn — Even so, the curtain drawn R L 374 

is drawn the power of Greece " 1368 

■would be drawn out too long " 1616 

drawn by your own sweet skill Son 16 14 
Mine eyes have drawn thy shape " 24 10 
Dra^wn after you, you pattern " 98 12 
was in little drawn L C 90 

Dread — wondrous dread V A 635 

mother of dread and fear R L 117 

between desire and dread " 171 

O, this dread night " 965 

Dreadeth— the heart that shadows 

dreadeth " 270 

Dreadful — with dreadful prophecies VA 928 

by dreadful fancy waking RL 450 

with more dreadful sights " 462 

in the dreadful dead " 1625 

constrain'd with dreadful circum- 
stance " 1703 

thy voice his dreadful thunder P P 5 11 

Dreadfully — she is dreadfully beset RL 444 

Dreading — . . . . the winter's near Son 97 14 



Dreading— Dreading my love P P 7 10 

Dream — do seldom dream on evil R L 87 

A dream, a breath " 212 

If Collatinus dream of my intent " 218 

Thoughts are but dreams " 353 

starts Collatine as from a dream " 1772 

in dreams they look on thee Son 43 3 

when dreams do show thee " 43 14 

as a dream doth flattej " 87 13 

Before, a joy proposed ; behind, a 
dream " 129 12 

Dreaming — on things to come " 107 2 

dark dreaming night PP 15 8 

Dregs— but lost the dregs of life Son 74 9 

Drench'd — Or in the ocean ... . VA 494 

that his wounds wept, was drench'd " 1054 

deep-drenched in a sea of care R L 1100 

Dress — to dress his beauty new Son 68 12 

Dress'd — dress'd in all his trim " 98 2 

Dressing — is dressing old words new " 76 11 

dressings of a former sight " 123 4 

Di'ew — and backward drew V A 541 

painter drew so proud R L 1371 

this mild image drew ' " 1520 

from the purple fountain Brutus 

drew . " 1734 

from a maund she drew L C 36 

afflicted fancy fastly drew " 61 

Dried — Scarce had the sun dried up 

the dewy morn P P 6 1 

Drink — More thirst for drink VA 92 

His nostrils drink the air " 273 

Dost thou drink tears " 949 

that gave drink to thee R L 577 

his breath drinks up again " 1666 

like a willing patient I will drink Son 111 9 
Drink up the monarch's plague " 114 2 
most kingly. drinks it up " 114 10 

Drive — To drive infection V A 508 

drives the creeping thief R L 305 

drives away dark dreaming night PP 15 8 

Driven— hounds are to doubt VA 692 

Drone-like — and I a drone-like bee R L 836 

Droop — Doth make them droop VA 666 

Drooping— keep my eyelids Son 27 7 

Drop — an orient drop beside V A 981 

by drops of hot desire " 1074 

Which in round drops " 1170 

should drop on them R L 686 

huge stones with little water-drops " 959 

with swelling drops 'gan wet " 1228 

Many a dry drop " 1375 

of her drops spilling " 1236 

And drop sweet balm " 1466 

His eye drops fire " 1552 

And do not drop in for an after loss iSoji 90 4 
Now with the drops "107 9 

our drops this difference bore L C 300 

Dropp'd — dropp'd a precious jewel VA 824 

of her bosom dropp'd " 958 

Dropping— Green-dropping sap " 1176 

Dross — in selling hours of dross Son 146 11 

Drouth — yet complain on drouth V A 544 

Drown — labour drowns for want of 

skill R L 1099 

to drown in ken of shore " 1114 

And then they drown their eyes " 1239 

To drown one woe " 1680 

Then can I drown an eye Son 30 5 



DROWN 



82 



EACH 



Drown — nor grows with heat, nor 



drowns with showers 


Son 124 


12 


Drown'd — when she seemeth .... 


VA 




984 


never drown'd him 


RL 




266 


I in deep delight am chiefly 






drown'd 


PP 


8 


11 


Drudge — thy poor drudge to be 


Son 151 


11 


Drug — Drugs poison him 


" 


118 


14 


Drum — Scorning his churlish drum VA 




107 


Drumming— His drumming heart 


RL 




435 


Drunk — What potions have I drunk Son 119 


1 


Drunken — of a drunken brain 


VA 




910 


Who is but drunken 


" 




984 


Drunken Desire must vomit 


RL 




703 


Dry — blow them dry again 


VA 




52 


those hills be dry 


" 




233 


lips' rich treasure dry 


" 





552 


Dries up his oil 


" 




756 


sought still to dry 


" 




964 


Sighs dry her cheeks 


" 




966 


who first should dry 


" 




1092 


As dry combustious matter 


" 


«... 


1162 


To dry the old oak's sap 


RL 




950 


Many a dry drop 


" 




1375 


To dry the rain 


Son 


84 


6 


Duck— ducks as quickly in 


VA 





87 


Due — And as Ms due \»Tit in my tes 


- 






tament 


RL 




1183 


To eat the world's due 


Son 


1 


14 


That due of many now 


u 


31 


12 


That due to thee 


" 


39 


8 


mine eye's due 


" 


46 


13 


give thee that due 


" 


69 


3 


but earth, which is his due 


" 


74 


7 


Dug— swelling dugs do ache 


VA 




875 


Dull — in a dull disdain 


" 




33 


image dull and dead 


" 




212 


Looks on the dull earth 


" 




340 


From forth dull sleep 


RL 




450 


serves with dull debaters 


" 




1019 


but dull and slow she seems 


" 





1336 


K the dull substance 


Son 


44 


1 


Of my dull bearer 


" 


51 


2 


Shall neigh, — no dull flesh 


" 


51 


11 


'tis with so dull a cheer 


" 


97 


13 


I would not dull you i 


" 


102 


14 


o'er dull and speechless tribes 


" 


107 


12 


Dulling — Dulling my lines 


" 


103 


8 


Dullness— with a perpetual dullness " 


56 


8 


Dully— Plods dully on 


" 


50 


6 


Dumb — And all this dumb play 


VA 




359 


Though I were dumb 


" 




406 


Strike the wise dumb 


" 




1146 


All orators are dumb 


PL 




268 


he by dumb demeanour 


" 




474 


Sometime her grief is dumb 


" 




1105 


be you mute and dumb 


" 




1123 


Hath served a dumb arrest 


" 




1780 


And dumb presagers 


Son 


23 


10 


For who's so dumb 


" 


38 


7 


taught the dumb on high 


" 


78 


5 


be most my glory, being dumb 


" 


83 


10 


Me for my dumb thoughts 


" 


85 


14 


wilt thou be dumb 


" 


101 


9 


Dumbly— Dumbly she passions 


VA 




1059 


Dumps — Distress likes dumps 


RL 




1127 


Dun— why then her breasts are dun Son 130 


3 


During — bear an ever-during blame R L 




224 


Durst— But durst not ask of her 


" 




1223 



Durst — Or durst inhabit on a living 

brow Son 68 4 

Dust— And smear with dust R L 945 

and smeared all with dust " 1381 

my bones with dust Son 32 2 

Weighs not the dust " 108 10 

Duteous — yet the duteous vassal RL 1360 

The eyes 'fore duteous Son 7 11 

Duty— to get it is thy duty VA 168 

did him peculiar duties R L 14 

'gainst law or duty " 497 

For fleet-wing'd duty " 1216 

His kindled duty kindled " 1352 

hath my duty strongly knit Son 26 2 

To witness duty " 26 4 

Duty so great " 26 5 

In personal duty L C 130 

Dwell — dwells upon my suit VA 206 

within her bosom it shall dwell " 1173 

hot-burning fire doth dwell R L 1557 

where every eye doth dwell So7i 5 2 

and dwell in lover's eyes " 55 14 

with vilest worms to ^''^ell " 71 4 

within that pen doth dwell " 84 5 

no more shall dwell " 89 10 

sweet love should ever dwell " 93 10 

for complexion dwells " 99 4 

To dwell with him L C 129 

Dwell'd — all distress and dolour 

dwell'd RL 1445 

Dweller — Have I not seen dwellers So7i 125 5 

Dwelling— Love lack'd a dwelling L C 82 

Dye — have full as deep a dye Son 54 5 

with damask dye to grace her P P 7 5 

Forth their dye " 18 40 

Dyed — thou hast too grossly dyed Son 99 5 

of truth in beauty dyed " 101 2 

Dyer — like the dyer's hand " 111 7 

Dying — Even as a dying coal VA 338 

This dying virtue R L 223 

A dying life to living infamy " 1055 

That dying fear " 1266 

And dying eyes " 1378 

Like dying coals burnt out " 1379 

there's no more dying then Son 146 14 

Each— Each leaning on their elbows F-4 44 

in each cheek appears " 242 

each other did destroy " 346 

Each part in me " 436 

they kiss each other " 605 

Each envious brier " 705 

Each shadow makes him stop, each 

murmur stay ". 706 

From whom each lamp " 861 

numbs each feeling part " 892 

view'd each other's sorrow " 963 

each passion labours so " 969 

each tributary subject " 1045 

each part doth so surprise " 1049 

each several limb " 1067 

interchange each other's seat R L 70' 

each one by him enforced " 303 

As each unwilling portal " 309 

income of each precious thing " 334 

Each in her sleep " 404 

hearers to attend each line " 818 

with each thing she views " .. .. 1101 

So I at each sad strain " .. . 113x 



EACH 



83 



EAT 



pp 


2 


" 


7 


" 


15 


" 


15 


RL 




Sm 118 


VA 




RL 




PT 




VA 





Each — Each flower moistened R L 

each little mote will peep " 

wondering each other's chance " 
Each present lord began " 

burning head, each under eye Son 
Strikes each in each " 

Pointing to each his thunder " 

And each, though enemies " 

Both find each other " 

each doth good turns now unto the 

other " 

Each trifle under truest bars " 

tame to suflerance, bide each check " 
Each changing place " 

each part will be forgotten " 

I must each day say o'er 
Till each to razed oblivion 
For since each hand 
both to each friend 
Each eye that saw him L C ■ 

Each stone's dear nature " . 

each several stone " . 

Each cheek a river " . 

both to each friend 
Between each kiss 
Doth cite each moving sense 
each minute seems a moon 
Eager — tidings in my eager eyes 
an eager combat fight 
With eager compounds 
Eagle — ^Even as an empty eagle 
But eagles gazed upon 
Save the eagle, feather'd king 
Ear — For to a pretty ear 
I will enchant thine ear " 

His ears up-prick'd " 

high crest, short ears " 

Ear's deep-sweet music " 

Had I no eyes but ears, my ears 

would love " 

neither eyes nor ears " 

whispers in mine ear " 

with listening ear " 

Yet from mine ear " 

armed in mine ear " 

Mine ears, that to your wanton talk " 
sadly in her ear " 

Shaking their scratch'd ears " 

with eye or ear " 

She whispers in his ears " 

From thievish ears R L 

by our ears our hearts oft tainted 

be 
He stories to her ears 
with open listening ear 
His ear her prayer admits 
notes to pleasing ears 
interprets to the ear 
mermaid did their ears entice 
shadow'd by his neighbour's ear 
do ofiend thine ear Son 

Sing to the ear that doth thy lays 

esteem " 

that mine ear confounds " 

by mad ears believed be " 

Nor are mine ears " 

stories to delight his ear P P 

By ringing in thy lady's ear " 

to round me on th' ear " 



58 
60 
81 
108 
122 
127 
144 



1227 

1251 

1596 

1696 

2 

10 

6 

5 

11 

2 
2 
7 



4 

6 

7 

5 

11 

89 

210 

216 

283 

11 

8 

3 

15 

254 

1298 

2 

55 

1015 

11 

74 

145 

271 

297 

432 

433 

437 

659 

698 

778 

779 

809 

889 

924 

1023 

1125 

35 

38 

106 

283 

558 

1126 

1325 

1411 

1416 

6 



100 


7 


128 


4 


140 


12 


141 


5 


4 


5 


19 


28 


19 


51 



Early— Or being early pluck'd VA 528 

Which she too early R L 1801 

one early morn did shine Son 33 9 

too early I attended L C 78 

Earnest — Her earnest eye did make 

him RL 1356 

Earth — Earth's sovereign salve V A 28 

Upon the earth's increase " 169 

Unless the earth " 170 

The bearing earth " 267 

Looks on the dull earth " 340 

and all the earth relieveth " 484 

in earth or heaven " 493 

fall to the earth " 546 

The earth, in love with thee " 722 

on the earth would breed " 753 

on earth usurp'd his name " 794 

earth's worm, what dost thou " 933 

earth's foundation shakes " 1047 

marks thee for my earth's delight R L 487 

From earth's dark womb " 549 

By heaven and earth " 572 

Seasoning the earth with showers " 796 

As the dank earth weeps " 1130 

But as the earth doth weep " 1226 

that breathes the fat earth's store " 1837 

And make the earth devour Son 19 2 

with earth and sea's rich gems " 21 6 

From sullen earth, sings hymns " 29 12 

Upon the farthest earth " 44 6 

so much of earth and water " 44 11 

nor earth nor boundless sea " 65 1 

The earth can have but earth " 74 7 

when I in earth am rotten " 81 2 

The earth can yield me " 81 7 

the centre of my sinful earth " 146 1 

To the orbed earth L C 25 

that on this earth doth shine P P 3 10 

Earth-delving — where earth-delv- 
ing conies keep V A 687 

Earthly — heavenly and earthly sun " 198 

suck'd an earthly mother " 863 

This earthly saint, adored R L 85 

ne'er touch'd earthly faces Son 17 8 

My vow was earthly P P Z 7 

with such an earthly tongue " 5 14 

Earthquake — But like an ... . V A 648 

Ease — ^With honour, wealth, and. ...iJ i 142 

ease to the pained " 901 

Doth teach that ease Son 50 3 

with ease we prove " 136 7 

Eased — oppression is not eased by 

night " 28 3 

Easeth — It easeth some, though 

none it ever cured R L 1581 

Easily — cannot be easily harm'd VA 627 

Easing — keep him from heart-easing 

words RL 1782 

East — the grey cheeks of the east Son 132 6 

throw gazes to the east P P 15 1 

Eastern— to meet the eastern light R L 773 

Easy — ^As easy might I Son 109 3 

Words are easy, like the wind P P 21 33 

Eat^eats up Love's tender spring VA 656 

water that doth eat in steel R L 755 

To eat up errors " 937 

To eat the world's due Son 1 14 

canker eat him up to death " 99 13 

Eat up thy charge " 145 8 



EATER 



84 



END 



Eater — ^Eater of youth, false slave R L 927 

Eating — themarrow-eatingsicknessF^ 741 

Were an all-eating shame Son 2 8 

Ebb — And sorrow ebbs, being blown i2 i 1330 

Tlius ebbs and flows " 1569 

Ebon— Not Death's ebon dart VA 948 

Echo — spend their mouths: Echo 

replies " 695 

And twenty echoes " 834 

still the choir of echoes " 840 

Eclipse — Clouds and eclipses stain Son 35 3 
Crooked eclipses 'gainst his glory " 60 7 
hath her eclipse endured " 107 5 

Eclipsed — suns were cloud-eclipsed 

so BL 1224 

Ecstasy — iu a trembling ecstasy VA 895 

her suffering ecstasy assuage L C 69 

Eddy — Yet in the eddy bonudeth in 

his pride R L 1669 

Edge — Thy edge should blunter be Son 56 2 
the knife ill used doth lose his edge " 95 14 
even to the edge of doom " 116 12 

This bateless edge R L 9 

Effect— The warm eflects VA 605 

But Lust's effect " 800 

robb'd of his effect " 1132 

All pure effects, and doth R L 251 

tUl their effects be tried " 353 

His venom in effect " 532 

Such devils steal effects " 1555 

Beauty's effect with beauty Son 5 11 

alter not love's sole effect " 36 7 

my dumb thoughts, speaking in 

effect " 85 14 

Effects of terror LC 202 

O cleft effect '' 293 

Effecting — nought at all effecting V A 912 

fell exploits effecting R L 429 

Effectually — but effectually is out Son 113 4 
Eisel— Potions of eisel " 111 10 

Either — Till either gorge be stuff'd V A 58 

Of cither's colour R L 66 

of either being so great " 69 

Swelling on either side " 389 

Whose love of either " 1165 

The face of either cipher'd cither's 

heart " 1396 

though enemies to cither's reign Son 28 5 
badges of cither's woe " 44 14 

So, either by thy picture " 47 9 

Either not assail'd " 70 10 

In cither's aptness L C 306 

To put in practice either P P 16 7 

Either was the other's mine P T 36 

To themselves yet either neither " 43 

That are either true or fair " 66 

Elboiv — leaning on their elbows VA 44 

Elder — How can I then be elder Son 22 8 
Element — water-galls in her dim 

element R L 1588 

by elements so slow Son 44 13 

these quicker elements are gone " 45 5 
Eloquence — Her modest eloquence 

with sighs is mixed R L 563 

my books be then the eloquence Son 23 9 

Else — or else be mute VA 208 

nothing else he sees " 287 

For nothing else " 288 

Else, suffer'd, it will set " 388 



Else — or else some shame supposed R L 377 

or else his quality " 875 

would else have come to me " 916 

And what wrong else may be im- 
agined " 1622 

else lasting shame " 1629 

Or else this glutton be Son 1 13 

Or else receivest with pleasure "84 

Or else of thee " 14 13 

thou gavest it else mistaking " 87 10 

None else to me " 112 7 

and all things else are thine L C 266 

Elsewhere — whilst thou dost wake 

elsewhere Son 61 13 

Tell ine thou lovest elsewhere " 139 5 

That they elsewhere might dart " 139 12 

Elysium— To clip Elysium VA 600 

Embarked — a late-embarked friend " 818 

Embassy — In tender of love Son 45 6 

Embrace — a sweet embrace VA 539 

from the sweet embrace " 811 

from their strict embrace " 874 

to embrace mine infamy R L 504 

seeing thee embrace him " 518 

Embraced — the warlike god .... me PP 11 5 

Embracenient— Beating his kind 

embracements V A 312 

that lends embracements " 790 

Embracing — with her hard .... "' 559 

brambles and embracing bushes " 629 

girdle with embracing flames R L 6 

Ember — Which, in pale embers hid " 5 

Embroider'd — Embroider'd all with 

leaves PP 20 12 

Emerald— The deep-green emerald L C 213 

Emptied — Have emptied all their 

fountains " 255 

Empty — Even as an empty eagle V A 55 

through the empty skies " 1191 

Emulation — Seeing such emulation P X 1808 

Enacted^policy remains enacted " 529 

Eucanip'd — Encamp'd in hearts L C 203 

Enchained — Cancell'd my fortunes 

and enchained me RL 934 

Enchant — I will enchant thine ear V A 145 

did enchant the mind L C 89 

Enchanted — Enchanted Tarquin an- 
swers R L 83 

and sexes both enchanted L C 128 

Enchanting — roundenchantingpits F^4 247 

Siuon, whose enchanting story R L 1521 

Enclose — his traitor eye encloses " 73 

which their hue encloses L C 287 

Enclosed — and keep themselves. ... P i 373 

Here enclosed in cinders lie P T 55 

Enconipass'd — encompass'd with a 

winding maze P X 1151 

Encounter — for the hot encounter VA 596 

If thou encounter " 672 

which no encounter dare " 676 

Encouraging — As 'twere encourag- 
ing the Greeks to fight R L 1402 

Encrinison'd — and the .... mood L C 201 

End — now stand on end V A 272 

but unsavoury end " 1138 

finds no excuse nor end P L 238 

to a great, good end " 528 

my life's fair end shall free it " 1208 

to this end from me derived " 1755 



END 



85 



ENTREAT 



End — bath in the world an end Son 9 11 

Against this coming end " 13 3 

Thy end is truth's and beauty's 

doom and date " 14 14 
my weary travel's end " 50 2 
the world-without-end hour " 57 5 
our minutes hasten to their end " 60 2 
my life hath end " 92 6 
have what shall have no end " 110 9 
she alter'd with an end " 145 9 
is this thy body's end " 146 8 
Augur of the fever's end P T 7 

End — And where she ends VA 60 

the story aptly ends " 716 

End without audience " 846 

End thy ill aim H L 579 

an hour great strifes to end " 899 

to end a hapless life " 1045 

the fatal knife, to end his vow " 1843 

losses are restored and sorrows end &)» 30 14 

Endeared — Thy bosom is endeared " 31 1 

Ended — hath ended in the west VA 530 

before thy shoot be ended It L 579 

Philomel had ended " 1079 

For now my song is ended P P 16 16 

Ender — my origin and ender L C 222 

Ending— the worldhath ending with 

thy life VA 12 

date of never-ending woes E L 935 

dirge of her certain ending " 1612 

out to the ending doom Son 55 12 

Endless — To endless date of never- 
ending woes JR L 935 

olives of endless agfe Son 107 8 

Endoiv'd — Look, whom she best " 11 11 

Endure — their verdure still endure VA 507 

in her poison'd closet yet endure R L 1659 

lively heat, still to endure Son 153 6 

Endured— their dolour others have 

endured RL 1582 

hath her eclipse endured Son 107 5 

Enemy — Finding their enemy V A 887 

light and lust are deadly enemies R L 674 

batter'd by the enemy " 1171 

Greeks that are thine enemies " 1470 

Mine enemy was strong " 1646 

though enemies to either's reign Son 28 5 
have been mine enemies " 139 10 

Enfeebled — that enfeebled mine " 86 14 

Enforced — I enforced this fire R L 181 

Each one by him enforced " 303 

if not, enforced hate " 668 

enforced by sympathy " 1228 

therefore art enforced to seek an ew Son 82 7 

Enforcement — By foul enforcement i2 £ 1623 

Enfranchising — Enfranchising his 

mouth VA 396 

Engine — Once more the engine " 367 

Engirt — engirts so white a foe " 364 

that hath engirt his marriage R L 221 

engirt with daring infamy " 1173 

Englishman — Till looking on an 

Englishman PP 16 3 

Engraft — I engraft you new Son 15 14 

Engrafted — my love engrafted to 

this store " 37 8 

Engraven — it will live engraven in 

my face RL 203 

Engrossed— thou harder hast .... Son 133 6 



Enjoy— their loves shall not enjoy V A 

this night I must enjoy thee R L 

for still the world enjoys it Son 9 

With what I most enjoy " 29 
Enjoy'd — enjoy'd but of a few R L 

Eujoy'd no sooner but despised 
straight Son 129 
Enjoyer — Now proud as an enjoyer " 75 
Enlarged — envy evermore enlarged " 70 
Enligliten — And to enlighten thee " 152 
Enmity — disdain and deadly enmity iJ L 

death and all-oblivious enmity Son 
Enough — within this limit is relief 



55 



VA 

Son 



PP 

L C 
VA 

RL 
VA 

Son 



enough 

'Tis not enough that through 

like enough thou know'st 

They had not skill enough 

your pity is enough to cure me 

Is 't not enough to torture me 

More than enough am I 

But soft! enough — too much 
Enpatrou — you enpatron me 
Enraged— Being so enraged 

how he is enraged 

Here, all enraged 
Enricli — enrich the poor 

and much enrich thy book 
Enricli'd — annexions of fair gems 

enrich'd L C 

Ensconce — do I ensconce me here Son 

Ensconced — so his secret evil R L 

Ensign— churlish drum and red VA 

Ensnare — do not then ensnare me R L 

Ensnared — thee to this night " 

Ensue — repentant tears .... the deed " 

another straight ensues " 

and shame that might ensue " 

Ensuing — or any thing ensuing VA 
Enswathed — Enswathed, and seal'd L C 
Enter — thy spear's point can enter VA 

false sound enter there " 

through which it enters " 

and enter this sweet city 

Soft pity enters at an iron gate 

Enterprise— of his loathsome 

Entertain— I did entertain thee 

did I entertain \\m\. 

The weary time she cannot enter 
tain 

And entertain my love 

To entertain the time 
thoughts of love 
Entertain'd — All entertain'd 
passion 

He entertain'd a show 
Entertainment — Witness the 
Entice — some mermaid did their 
ears entice 

Quickly him they will entice 
Entitled — Entitled in thy parts 
Entomb — Entombs her outcry 

quoth she, 'your tunes entomb 
Entombed — her head entombed is 

entombed in men's eyes 
Entrance — No penetrable entrance 

to her plaining R L 

Entreat— entreats, and prettily en- 
treats V A 

as I entreat thee now " 



RL 



1164 

512 

10 

8 
22 

5 
5 
12 
11 
503 
9 

235 
5 

12 

14 

3 

3 

49 

224 

29 

317 

1562 

1150 

14 

208 
9 
1515 
107 
584 
485 
502 
1104 
1263 
1078 
49 
626 
780 
890 
469 
595 
184 
596 
842 

1361 
1629 



with 



Son 39 11 



each 



VA 


.... 969 


RL 


.... 1514 


VA 


.... 1108 


RL 


.... 1411 


PP 


21 44 


Son 


37 7 


EL 


.... 679 


" 


.... 1121 


" 


.... 390 



Son 81 8 



ENVIOUS 



86 



EVEN 



EtiTious — Each envious brier VA 705 

Envy — that, envy of so rich a thing Jl L 39 

Wrath, envy, treason, rape " 909 

envy evermore enlarged Son 70 12 

Do I envy those jacks " 128 5 
Epitaph — I shall live your epitaph 

to make " 81 1 

Equal — weep with equal strife R L 1791 

where your equal grew ' Son 84 4 

as some my equals did L C 148 

Equally — Ne'er settled equally VA 1139 

Equipage — in ranks of better .... Son 32 12 

Ere — ere his words begun VA 462 

and, ere he says 'Adieu " 537 

sweet boy, ere this " 613 

ere summer half be done " 802 

caucell'd ere well begun R L 2G 

ere rich at home he lands " 336 

•works ere traitors be espied " 361 

begin ere once she speaks " 567 

Ere he can see his own " 704 

yet ere he go to bed " 776 

Ere he arrive his weary noon-tide 

prick " 781 

As I, ere this, was pure to Collatine " 826 

' Madam, ere I was up " 1277 

ere the break of day " 1280 

And ere I rose was Tarquin " 1281 

Ere she with blood had stain'd " 1316 

Ere once she can discharge " 1605 

But ere I name him " 1688 

ere thou be distill'd Son 6 2 
ere it be self-kill'd "64 

Ere beauty's dead fleece " 68 8 

which thou must leave ere long " 73 14 

Ere you were born " 104 14 

ere that there was true needing " 118 8 

Ere long espied a fickle maid L C 5 

Consents bewitch'd, ere he desire " 131 

Her cloudy looks will calm ere 

night PP 19 14 

And twice desire ere it be day " 19 17 

Err — To say they err I dare not Son 131 7 

Erred — my heart and eyes have .... " 137 13 

Error — And childish error VA 898 

To eat up errors R L 937 

So are those errors Son 96 7 

If this be error " 116 13 

my wilfulness and errors " 117 9 
What wretched errors hath my 

heart committed " 119 5 

a thousand errors note " 141 2 

Are errors of the blood L C 184 

Erst — Which erst from heat Son 12 6 
Escape — ' night's 'scapes doth open 

lay R L 747 

Couid 'scape the hail L C 310 

Escaped — when my heart, hath 

'scaped this sorrow Son 90 5 
Escapeth — The scars of battle 'sca- 

peth by the flight L C 244 

Espied — ere traitors be espied R L 351 

espied a fickle maid L C 5 

Espoused — might be .... to more 

fame B L 20 

Espy — trampling courser doth espy V A 261 

Essay — And worse essays proved the Son 110 8 

Essence— Had the but in one P T 26 

Estate— colour'd with his high .... R L 92 



Esteem — Alas, he nought esteems VA 631 

doth thy lays esteem " 100 7 

with a false esteem " 127 12 

Esteemed — the Romans were .... so i? i 1811 

will be well esteem'd Son 96 6 

better to be vile than vile esteem'd " 121 1 

Esteeming — whose rich esteeming '' 102 3 

Estimate — thou know'st thy estimate " 87 2 

Eternal— cast into eternal sleeping VA 951 

solicited the eternal powers R L 345 

of death's eternal cold Son 13 12 

But thy eternal summer " 18 9 

When in eternal lines " 18 12 

Eternal numbers to outlive " 38 12 

And brass, eternal slave " 64 4 

So that eternal love " 108 9 

spend her living in eternal love L C 238 

Eternity — sells eternity to get a toy R L 214 

Thou ceaseless lackey to eternity " 967 

thievish progress to eternity Son 77 8 

even to eternity " 122 4 

laid great bases for eternity " 125 3 

To eternity doth rest P T 58 

Ethiope — Juno but an Ethiope were P P 11 16 

Eve — How like Eve's apple Son 93 13 

Even — Even as the sun VA 1 

and even now " 39 

Even as an empty eagle " 55 

Even so she kiss'd his brow " 59 

Even by the stern " 98 

even where I list " 154 

even by their own " 216 

Even as a dying coal " 338 

Even as the wind " 458 

Even as poor birds " 601 

Even so she languisheth " 603 

Even so confounded " 827 

Even so the timorous " 881 

Even at this word " 1025 

Even there he starts ' R L .348 

Even so the curtain drawn " 374 

That even for anger " 478 

even in my soul " 498 

even in plenty wanteth " 557 

Even in this thought " 729 

Even in the moment " 808 

Even so the maid " 1228 

Even so this pattern " 1350 

For even as subtle Sinon " 1541 

Even .so his sighs " 1672 

Even here she sheathed " 1723 

even by the self-same sky Son 15 6 

Even so my sun " 33 9 

and even I in this " 35 5 

Even for this let us divided live " 39 5 

lead me in their riot even there " 41 11 
for my sake even so doth she 

abuse me " 42 7 

Who even but now come back " 45 11 

And even thence thou wilt be stolen " 48 13 

Even in the eyes " 55 11 

hungry eyes even till they wink " 56 6 

Even of five hundred courses " 59 6 

even so as foes " 69 4 

your love even with my life decay " 71 12 

even in the mouths of men " 81 14 

Even such a beauty " 106 8 

Even as when first " 108 8 

Even to thy pure " 110 14 



EVEN 



87 



EXAMPLE 



Even — Even that your pity Son 111 14 

Even those that said "115 2 

bears it out even to the edge of doom " 116 12 

Even so, being full " 118 5 

Beyond all date, even to eternity " 122 4 

Even there resolved L C 296 

' Even thus,' quoth she P P 11 5^ 

'Even thus,' quoth she " 11 7 

' Even thus,' quoth she " 11 9 

Even so, poor bird, like thee " 21 27 

Even — or morn or weary even V A 495 

thou gild'st the even Son 28 12 

star that ushers in the even " 132 7 

Evening — All our evening sport P P 18 47 

Event — of war and dire events V A 1159 

What uncouth ill event R L 1598 

Ever — feast might ever last V A 447 

that ever yet betoken'd " 453 

that ever threat his foes " 620 

ever strive to kiss you " 1082 

Yet ever to obtain R L 129 

If ever man were moved " 587 

That ever modest eyes " 683 

ever let his unrecalling crime " 993 

If ever, love, thy Lucrece " 1306 

though none it ever cured " 1581 

And ever since, as pitying " 1747 

in my verse ever live young Son 19 14 

if ever that time come " 49 1 

■watchman, ever for thy sake " 61 12 
slander's mark was ever yet the 

fair " 70 2 

still all one, ever the same " 76 5 

when thou wilt ; if ever, now " 90 1 

sweet love should ever dwell " 93 10 

still such, and ever so " 105 4 

nor no man ever loved " 116 14 

and this shall ever be " 123 13 

that tongue that ever sweet " 145 6 

who ever shunn'd by precedent L C 155 

were ever brokers to defiling " 173 

to none was ever said " 180 

my leisures ever charmed " 183 

beauty blemish'd once 's for ever 

lost PP 13 11 

whose month was ever May " 17 2 

Ever-during — bear an blame R L 224 

Ever-flxed— it is an ever-fixed mark So?i 116 5 

Evei'lasting — Tarquin's everlasting 

banishment R L 1855 

Evermore — acknowledge thee Son 36 9 

envy evermore enlarged " 70 12 

Frantic-mad with evermore unrest " 147 10 

Every — he comes in every jar VA 100 

every light impression " 566 

comment upon every woe " 714 

Every tongue more moving " 776 

unto every stranger " 790 

answering every call " 849 

every present sorrow " 970 

every beauty robb'd " 1132 

For every little grief " 1179 

And every one to rest R L 125 

Till every minute pays " 329 

sets every joint a-shaking " 452 

mark of every open eye " 520 

kings, like gods, should govern 

every thing " 602 

that every eye can see " 750 



Every — Shape every bush a hideous iZ L 973 

seek every hour to kill " 998 

gazed upon with every eye " 1015 

through every cranny spies " 1086 

with every thing she sees " 1093 

When every part a part of woe " 1327 

Imagine every eye beholds " 1343 

changed to black in every vein " 1454 

For every teau he falls " 1551 

Circles her body in on every side " 1739 

every eye doth dwell Son 5 2 

bareness every where "58 

When every private widow "97 

consider every thing " 15 1 

And every fair from fair " 18 7 

And every fair with his fair " 21 4 

outstripp'd by every pen " 32 6 

For every vulgar paper " 38 4 

prey of every vulgar thief " 48 8 

every hour survey " 52 3 
Since every one hath, every one, 

one shade " 53 3 

can every shadow lend " 53 4 

in every blessed shape " 53 12 

all my every part " 62 2 

That every word " 76 7 

As every alien pen " 78 3 

blessing every book " 82 4 

admired every where " 84 12 

To every hymn " 85 7 

And every humour " 91 5 

doth cover every blot " 95 11 
December's bareness every where " 97 4 

of youth in every thing " 98 3 

despised every where " 100 12 

publish every where " 102 4 

burthens every bough " 102 11 

Creating every bad " 114 7 

to every wandering bark " 116 7 

That every tongue '" 127 14 

like in every part " 132 12 

To every place at once L C 27 

And every light occasion " 86 

jest at every gentle offer P P 4 12 
truth in every shepherd's tongue " 20 18 

Every thing did banish moan " 21 7 

Every one that flatters thee " 21 31 

Every man will be thy friend " 21 35 

Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55 

Every fowl of tyrant wing P T 10 

Evidence — lust came .... to swear R L 1650 

Evident — that thou none lovest is 

most evident Son 10 4 

Evil— do seldom dream on evil R L 87 

O, unlook'd-for evil " 846 

thought of his committed evil " 972 

shall be accounted evil " 1245 

evils that obscurely sleep " 1250 

ensconced his secret evil " 1515 

of good or evil luck Son 14 3 

by evil still made better " 119 10 

Unless this general evil " 121 13 

my female evil " 144 5 

my female evil P P 2 5 

Example — By whose example R L 1194 

Which should example where your 

equal grew Son 84 4 

by self-example mayst thou ' " 142 14 

Or forced examples L C 157 



EXAMPLE 



88 



EYE 



Example— Of stale example L C 268 

Exceed— the liTlng should exceed VA 292 

whose leave exceeds commission " 568 

far exceeds his barren skill R L 81 

the fear doth still exceed " 229 

I found you did exceed Son 83 3 

thy worst all best exceeds " 150 8 

Exceeded — Exceeded by the height " 32 8 

Excel — So did this horse excel . VA 293 

which fairly doth excel Son 5 4- 

Excell'd— wherein they late excell'd K^ 1131 

Excellence — stewards of their .... Son 94 8 

in a wondrous excellence " 105 6 

Excellent — sweet argument, too . . . . " 38 3 

though excellent in neither P P 7 18 

Excelleth — whose light thine R L 191 

Excelling — of thy face excelling V A 443 

Except — which physic did except Son 147 8 

Excess — the profit of excess R L 138 

inheritors of this excess Son 146 7 

but where excess begs all L C 42 

Exchanged — not with the time .... Son 109 7 
Exchequer — no .... now but his " 67 11 

Exclaim-:-the dogs exclaim aloud V A 886 

exclaims on Death " 930 

exclaims against repose R L 757 

he would exclaim L C 313 

Exclaiming' — exclaiming on the 

direful night RL 741 

Exclamation — in his pride, no ... . " 705 

Excuse — AVhat bare excuses V A 188 

O strange excuse " 791 

He makes excuses R L 114 

O what excuse " 225 

Might have excuse " 235 

finds no excuse nor end " 238 

for colour or excuses " 267 

in cleanly-coin'd excuses " 1073 

had staiu'd her stain'd excuse " 1316 

Where no excuse can give " 1614 

to make mine own excuse " 1653 

By my excuse shall claim excuse's 

giving " 1715 

and make my old excuse Son 2 11 

O, what excuse " 51 5 

Excuse — Let me excuse thy courser VA 403 

thus I will excuse ye Son 42 5 

excuse the slow oflfence " 51 1 

thus shall excuse my jade " 51 12 

Excuse not silence so " 101 10 

Let me excuse thee " 139 9 

Excusing — Excusing thy sins more " 35 8 
Executcst — executest the traitor's 

treason R L 877 

Executor— lives th' executor to be Son 4 14 
Exliale-^Exhale this vapour vow PP 3 11 
Exhaled — their exhaled unwhole- 
some breaths R L 779 

Exile — she joy'd to jest at my exile P P 14 9 

Exiled — for exiled majesty's repeal jB L 640 

Expect — for that which we expect " 149 

Expected—' expected of my friends VA 718 

Expecting — the onset still RL 432 

Expel — doth labour to expel VA 976 

Expense — And moan the expense Son 30 8 

husband nature's riches from ex- 

■ pense " 94 6 

The expend of spirit " 129 1 

Experience— Experience for me L C 152 



Experienced — Now set thy long- 
experienced wit to school R L 1820 

Expiate— death my day should .... Son 22 4 

Expire — whereon it must expire " 73 11 

Expired — An expired date R L 26 

when body's works expired Son 27 4 

Exploit — fell exploits effecting R L 429 

Express — express my grief for one V A 1069 

with heaved-up hand she doth ex- 
press R L Ill 

than I can well express " 1286 

That may express my love Son 108 4 

lend me words, and words express " 140 3 

Express'd — no outward harm ... . RL 91 

that more hath more express'd Son 23 12 
pen would have express'd " 106 7 
from the truth vainly express'd " 147 12 
Expressing — One thing expressing " 105 8 
Expressly — their manners most ex- 
pressly told RL 1397 

Extant — being extant, well might 

show Son 83 6 
Exteniporally — sings extemporally 

a woeful ditty VA 836 

Extend — sometimes they do extend L C 25 

their sighs to you extend " 276 

Extenuate — she doth extenuate V A 1010 

Extern — With my extern Son 125 2 

External — In all external grace " 53 13 

Extincture — and chill extiucture L C 294 

Extinguishing — . . . . his conduct R L 313 

Extreme — are both of them ex- 
tremes VA 987 

And extreme fear can neither 

fight R L 230 

extremes beyond extremity " 969 

still urgeth such extremes " 1337 

Savage, extreme, rude Son 129 4 

and in quest to have, extreme " 129 10 

Extremity — extremes beyond ... . RL 969 

Extremity still urgeth " 1337 

When swift extremity Son 51 6 

Ewe — My ewes bresd not P P 18 2 

Eye— in his angry eyes VA 70 

since eyes in eyes " 120 

Mine eyes are grey ' 140 

With burning eye " 178 

dark, disliking eye " 182 

Thine eye darts forth " 196 

but the eye alone " 213 

fiery eyes blaze forth " 219 

His eye, which scornfully " 275 

to captivate the eye " 281 

Broad breast, full eye " 295 

holds her in his eye " 342 

to his eyes suing " 356 

His eyes saw her eyes " 357 

Her eyes woo'd still, his eyes dis- 

dain'd " 358 

her eyes did rain " 360 

when his glutton eye " 309 

Had I no eyes " 433 

neither eyes nor ears " 437 

illumine with her eye " 486 

Thy eyes' shrewd tutor " 500 

And these mine eyes " 503 

mine eyes to watch " 584 

surfeit by the eye " 602 

His eyes, like glow-worms " 621 



EYE 



89 



EYE 



Eye — To which Love's eyes V A 632 

fear lurk iu mine eye " 644 

presenteth to mine eye " 661 

from Venus' eye " 816 

AVhereon with fearful eyes " 927 

thou hast no eyes " 939 

eyes that taught all other eyes " 952 

O, how her eyes " 961 

I Her eyes seen in the tears, tears 

I in her eye " 962 

prison'd in her eye " 980 

with eye or ear " 1023 

Which seen, her eyes " 1031 

her eyes are fled " 1037 

once more leap her eyes " 1050 

Her eyes are mad " 1062 

her mangling eye " 1065 

oft the eye mistakes " 1068 

Mine eyes are turn'd " 1072 

mine eyes' red fire " 1073 

Whose downward eye " 1106 

that close his eyes " 1127 

to wet his eyes " 1179 

The eyes of men B L 30 

his traitor eye encloses " 73 

of still gazing eyes " 84 

wonder of his eye " 95 

coped with stranger eyes " 99 

More than his eyes " 105 

closed up mortal eyes " 163 

his lustful eye " 179 

Mine eyes forego their light " 228 

in my eager eyes " 254 

countermand mine eye " 270 

That eye which looks " 290 

That eye which him beholds " 291 

The eye of heaven " 356- 

his eyes begun " 374 

lewd, unhallow'd eyes " 392 

Her eyes, like marigolds " 397 

his wilful eye " ..... 417 

His eye, which late •• 426 

cheers up his burning eye " 435 

His eye commends " 436 

her lock'd-up eyes " 446 

ugly iu her eyes " 459 

that the eyes fly " 461 

For those thine eyes " 483 

Only he hath an eye " 496 

every open eye " 520 

cockatrice' dead-killing eye " _... 540 

Her pity-pleading eyes " 561 

Where subjects' eyes do learn " 616 

askance their eyes " 637 

That ever modest eyes " 683 

With heavy eye " 709 

And my true eyes " .....* 748 

every e)'e can see " 750 

And bids her eyes " 758 

And Tarquin's eye ' " 830 

And scarce hath eyes " 857 

his lewd eyes affright " 971 

gazed upon with every eye " 1015 

mine eyes, like sluices " 1076 

to all fair eyes " 1083 

O eye of eyes " 1088 

eyes that are sleeping " 1090 

to atlright mine eye " 1138 

As charming any eye " 1143 



Eye — from her bright eyes K L 1213 

like a melting eye " 1227 

And then they drown their eyes " 1239 

For then the eye " 1325 

with a steadfast eye " 1339 

Imagine every eye " 1343 

Her earnest eye " 1356 

And dying eyes " 1378 

The very eyes of men " 1383 

those far-off eyes look sad " 1386 

In Ajax' eyes " 1398 

save to the eye " 1426 

with her old eyes " 1448 

Lucrece spends her eyes '' 1457 

scratch out the angry eyes " 1469 

Thy eye kindled the fire " 1475 

for trespass of thine eye " 1476 

She throws her eyes about " 1499 

calm looks, eyes wailing still " 1508 

Priam wets his eyes " 1548 

His eye drops fire " 1552 

about her tear-distained eye '' 1586 

Her eyes, though sod in tears " 1592 

beauty had purloin'd his. eyes " 1651 

With sad-set eyes " 1662 

Outruns the eye " 1668 

one pair of weeping eyes " 1680 

tears in Collatinus' eyes " 1817 

thine own bright eyes Son 1 5 

own deep-sunken eyes "27 

every eye doth dwell "52 

each under eye "72 

The eyes, 'fore duteous • " 7 11 

to wet a widow's eye "91 

By children's eyes "98 

But from thine eyes " 14 9 

in eyes of men " 16 12 

beauty of your eyes " 17 5 

the eye of heaven " 18 5 

or eyes can see " 18 13 

An eye more bright " 20 5 

steals men's eyes " 20 8 

To hear with eyes " 23 14 

Mine eye hath play'd " 24 1 

with thine eyes " 24 8 
what good turns eyes for eyes 

have done " 24 9 

Mine eyes have drawn thy shape " 24 10 

Yet eyes this cunning " 24 13 

at the sun's eye ''25 6 

fortune and men's eyes " 29 1 

can I drown an eye " 30 5 

stol'n from mine eye " 31 6 

with sovereign eye " 33 2 

mine eyes best see " 43 1 

to unseeing eyes " 43 S 

mine eyes be blessed " 53 9 

on sightless eyes " 43 12 

Mine eye and heart " 46 1 

Mine eye my heart " 46 3 

My heart ijiine eye " 46 4 

with crystal eyes " 46 6 

The clear eye's moiety " 46 12 

mine eye's due " 46 13 

Betwixt mine eye and heart " 47 1 

mine eye is famish'd " 47 3 

my eye doth feast " 47 5 

mine eye is my heart's guest " 47 7 

heart's and eye's delight " 47 14 



EYE 



90 



FACE 



Eye — ^thafc sun, thine eye San 49 6 

eyes of all posterity " 55 11 

and dwell in lovers' eyes " 55 14 

Thy hungry eyes " 56 6 

mine eye awake ' " 61 10 

possesseth all mine eye " 62 1 

world's eye doth view " 69 1 

the eye hath shown " 69 8 

their eyes were kind " 69 11 

Thine eyes, that taught " 78 5 

men's eyes shall lie " 81 8 

Which eyes not yet created " 81 10 

one of your fair eyes " • 83 13 

in the eye of scorn " 88 2 

no hatred in thine eye " 93 5 

that eyes can see " 95 12 

your eye I eyed " 104 2 

eye may be deceived " 104 12 

of lip, of eye, of brow " 106 6 

with divining eyes " 106 11 

Have eyes to wonder " 106 14 

mine eye is in my mind " 113 1 

mine eye saith true " 114 3 

Mine eye well knows " 114 11 

That mine eye loves " 114 14 

mine eyes out of their sphere " 119 7 

false adulterate eyes " 121 5 

my mistress' eyes " 127 9 

Her eyes so suited " 127 10 

My mistress' eyes " 130 1 

Thine eyes I love " 132 1 

two mourning eyes " 132 9 

cruel eye hath taken " 133 5 

thou to mine eyes " 137 1 

If eyes, corrupt " 137 5 

Why of eyes' falsehood " 137 7 

Or mine eyes seeing " 137 11 

heart and eyes have erred " 137 13 

not with thine eye " 139 3 

glance thine eye aside " 139 6 

Bear thine eye straight " 140 14 

love thee with mine eyes " 141 1 

thine eyes woo " 142 10 

what eyes hath Love " 148 1 

my false eyes dote " 148 5 

Love's eye is not so true " 148 8 

can Love's eye be true " 148 9 

Lest eyes well-seeing " 148 14 

motion of thine eyes " 149 12 

gave eyes to blindness " 152 11 

mistress' eye Love's brand " 153 9 

my mistress' eyes " 153 14 

Sometimes her levell'd eyes L C 22 

bathed she in her fluxive eyes " 50 

That maidens' eyes stuck over all 

his face " 81 

Each eye that saw him " 89 

To serve their eyes " 135 

that mine eyes have seen " 190 

which brought me to her eye " 247 

put out Religion's eye " 250 

Believed her eyes " 262 

his watery eyes he did dismount " 281 

the inundation of the eyes " 290 

infected moisture of his eye " 323 

heavenly rhetoric of thine eye PP 3 1 

favours to allure his eye "46 

and makes his book thine eyes "55 

Thine eye Jove's lightning seems " 5 11 



Eye — look'd on the world with glo- 



rious eye 


PP 


6 11 


Lord, how mine eyes 


" 


15 1 


trust the oflSce of mine eyes 


" 


15 4 


and eyes their wished sight 


" 


15 10 


the fair'st that eye could see 


" 


16 3 


When as thine eye 


" 


19 1 


Eyeball— Look in mine eyeballs 


VA 


119 


Kolling his greedy eyeballs 


ML 


363 


Eyed— when first your eye I eyed 


Son 104 2 


Eyelid — She vail'd her eyelids 


VA 


956 


my drooping eyelids open wide 


Son 


27 7 


My heavy eyelids 


" 


61 2 


Eye-sore— And be an eye-sore 


RL 


.... 205 


Eyne — sweet lips and crystal eyne 


VA 


.... 633 


from my doting eyne 


RL 


.... 643 


Her circled eyne 


" 


.... 1229 


her napkin to her eyne 


LC 


.... 15 


Face— with purple-colour'd face 


VA 


1 


breatheth in her face 


" 


.... 62 


thine own face affected 


" 


.... 157 


The sun doth burn my face 


" 


.... 186 


of thy face excelling 




.... 443 


So is her face 




.... 486 


upon his hairless face 




.... 487 


face grows to face 




.... 540 


Her face doth reek 




.... 555 


that face of thine 




.... 631 


not mark my face 




.... 643 


My face is full of shame 




.... 808 


some kiss her face 




.... 872 


To wash the foul face 




.... 983 


His face seems twain 




.... 1067 


What face remains alive 




.... 1076 


To see his face 




.... 1093 


If he did see his face 




.... 1109 


And stains her face 




.... 1122 


Within whose face beauty and 




virtue strived 


RL . 


... 52 


in Lucrece' face was seen 


" . 


... 64 


iu her fair face's field 


" . 


72 


engraven in my face 


" . 


... 203 


blows the smoke of it into his face " . 


... 312 


The colour in thy face 


" . 


... 477 


wrinkles of his face 


" . 


... 562 


Cooling his hot face 


" . 


... 682 


behold that face 


" . 


... 800 


in Collatinus' face 


" . 


... 829 


For why her face wore sorrow's 






livery 


" . 


... 1222 


Poor women's faces 


" . 


... 1253 


iu both their faces blazed 


" . 


... 1353 


triumphing in their faces 


" . 


... 1388 


The face of either 


" . 


... 1396 


Their face their manners most 






expressly told 


" . 


... 1397 


a press of gaping faces 


" . 


... 1408 


a face, a leg, a head 


" .. 


... 1427 


To find a face 


" .. 


... 1444 


His face, though full of cares 


" .. 


... 1503 


they view'd their faces 


" .. 


... 1526 


in his plain face 


" .. 


... 1532 


But such a face 


" .. 


... 1540 


in her sad face 


" .. 


... 1591 


The face, that map 


" .. 


.. 1712 


mourning and congealed face 


" .. 


.. 1744 


pale fear in his face' 


" .. 


.. 1775 


tell the face thou viewest 


Son 


3 1 



FACE 



91 



FAIR 



Face — that face should form another Son 3 2 

ne'er touch'd earthly faces " 17 8 
facewithNature'sownhandpainted" 20 1 

and her old face new " 27 12 

Kissing with golden face " 33 3 

on his celestial face " 33 6 

on my storm-beaten face " 34 6 

Methinks no face so gracious " 62 5 

husband ; so love's face " 93 2 

That in thy face " 93 10 

owners of their faces " 94 7 

my love's sweet face survey " 100 9 

and there appears a face " 103 6 

art's false-borrow'd face " 127 6 

Thy face hath not the power " 131 6 

but thinking oa thy face " 131 10 

eyes become thy face " 132 9 

upon so foul a face " 137 12 

from my face she turns " 139 11 

which flies before her face " 143 7 

eyes stuck over all his face L C 81 

were levell'd on my face " 282 

Paced — like a bold-faced suitor VA 6 

like a pale-faced coward " 569 

by this black-faced night " 773 

when a black-faced cloud B L 547 

Charging the sour-faced groom " 1334 

such black-faced storms " 1518 

Fact — ay, if the fact be known " 239 

powers to whom I pray abhor this 

fact " 349 

Faculty — Have faculty by nature Svtf, \Ti, 6 
Fade — eternal summer shall not fade " 18 9 

and unrespected fade " 54 10 

Fadeth — sunset fadeth in the west " 73 6 

Fading — and all her fading sweets " 19 7 

upon thy fading mansion " 146 6 

Fain — now she fain would speak V A 221 

Faint — Who is so faint " 401 

she faint with dearth " 545 

Hot, faint, and weary " 559 

Grew I not taint " 645 

make my faint heart bleed " 6(19 

agues pale and faint " 739 

Faint — Atfection faints not " 569 

Faint not, faint heart iJ L 1209 

Here manly Hector faints " 1483 

O, how I faint Son 80 1 
Fainted — with grief or travail he 

had fainted R L 1543 

Faintly — faintly she up-heaveth V A 482 

He faintly flies R L 740 

Fair — her fair immortal hand V A 80 

those fair lips of thine " 115 

mine be not so fair " 116 

Fair flowers that are not " 131 

o'erwhelming his fair sight " 183 

Speak, fair ; but speak fair words " 208 

Of the fair breeder . " 282 

With one fair hand " 351 

his fair cheek feels " 352 

his youth's fair fee " 393 

Fair fall the wit " 472 

Like the fair sun " 483 

' Fair queen,' quoth he " 523 

framing thee so fair " 744 

so fair a hope is slain " 762 

Of those fair arms " 812 

lost the fair discovery " 828 



Fair — this fair good-morrow V A 859 

from her two cheeks fair " 957 

on her fair delight " 1030 

Having no fair to lose " 1083 

to rob him of his fair " 1086 

Of Collatine's fair love R L 7 

challenge that fair field " 58 

in her fair face's field " 72 

in his fair welkin " 116 

' Fair torch, burn out thy light " 190 

Let fair humanity abhor " 195 

foul thoughts might compass his 

fair fair " 346 

Look, as the fair and fiery-pointed 

sun " 372 

her other fair hand was " 393 

From this fair throne " 413 

And makest fair reputation " 623 

From their fair life " 661 

his soul's fair temple " 719 

the supreme fair " 780 

Or toads infect fair founts " 850 

to all fair eyes " 1083 

my life's fair end shall free it " 1208 

Nor why her fair cheeks " 1225 

Of those fair suns " 1230 

bid fair Lucrece speak " 1268 

So fair a form " 1530 

hath thy fair colour spent " 1600 

ere I name him, you fair lords " 1688 

'tis a meritorious, fair design " 1692 

' He, he, fair lords " 1721 

that fair, fresh mirror " 1760 

by whom thy fair wife bleeds " 1824 

from forth her fair streets chased " 1834 

By heaven's fair sun " 1837 

This fair child of mine Son 2 10 
where is she so fair "35 
thou art much too fair " 6 13 
Who lets so fair a house " 13 9 
inward worth nor outward fair " 16 11 
every fair from fair sometime de- 
clines " 18 7 
of that fair thou owest " 18 10 
my love's fair brow " 19 9 
every fair with his fair doth re- 
hearse " 21 4 
my love is as fair " 21 10 
their fair leaves spread " 25 5 
with fair aspect " 26 10 
thy fair imperfect shade " 43 11 
Of thy fair health " 45 12 
thy fair appearance lies " 46 8 
The rose looks fair " 54 3 
of fair were born " 68 3 
To thy fair flower " 69 12 
ever yet the fair " 70 2 
such fair assistance " 78 2 
Of their fair subject " 82 4 
Thou art as fair " 82 5 
Thou truly fair « 82 11 
to your fair no painting set " 83 2 
one of your fair eyes " 83 13 
cause of this fair gift " 87 7 
But what's so blessed fair " 92 13 
things turn to fair " 95 12 
To me, fair friend " 104 1 
' Fair, kind, and true " 105 9 
' Fair, kind, and true " 105 10 



1 



FAIR 



92 



FALSE 



Fair — ' Fair, kind, and true Son 105 13 

hallow'd thy fair name " 108 8 

black was not counted fair " 127 1 

At such who, not born fair " 127 11 

no fair acceptance shine " 135 8 

no fair beseechers kill " 135 13 

To put fair truth " 137 12 

' is a man right fair " 144 3 

have sworn thee fair '■ 147 13 

if that be fair " 148 5 

have sworn tliee fair " 152 13 

when in his fair parts L C 83 

from many a several fair " 206 

annexions of fair gems " 208 

Showing fair nature " 311 

is a man right fair P P 1 3 

with her fair pride "28 

Then, thou fair sun " 3 10 

she on her back, fair queen " 4 13 
Fair is my love, but not so fair as 

fickle "71 
Fair was the morn when the fair 

queen of love "91 

did I see a fair sweet youth "99 

Sweet rose, fair flower " 10 ■ 1 

Fair creature, kill'd too soon " 10 4 

Spied a blossom passing fair " 17 3 

That are either true or fair P T 66 

Fairer — Thrice fairer than myself V A 7 

Shall hate be fairer lodged Son 10 10 

but fairer we it deem " 54 3 

Grows fairer than at first " 119 12 

made fairer by their place L C 117 

None fairer, nor none falser P P 1 6 

Fairest — fairest mover on this 

mortal round V A 368 

From fairest creatures Son 1 1 

descriptions of the fairest wights " 106 2 

Thou art the fairest " 131 4 

Thy black is fairest " 131 12 

The fairest votary took up that fire " 154 5 

the fairest one of three P P 16 1 

the fair'st that eye could see " 16 3 

Fairing— Fairing the foul Son 127 6 

Fairly — which fairly doth excel "54 

Fairy — Or, like a fairy, trip V A 146 

Faith — plight your honourable 

faiths to me R L 1690 

And purest faith unhappily fore- 
sworn Son 66 4 
Yet, in good faith " 131 5 
In faith, I do not love thee " 141 1 
and new faith torn " 152 3 
And all my honest faith " 152 8 
O never faith could hold P P 5 2 
Her faith, her oaths " 7 12 
Faith's defying " 18 6 
Where her faith was firmly fix'd " 18 11 
In faith, you had not had it " 19 24 

Faithful— Faithful friends are hard 

to find " 21 34 

Faithful friend from flattering foe " 21 58 

Falchion— His falchion on a flint R L 176 

under his insulting falchion " 509 

by Tarquin's falchion " 1046 

With shining falchion " 1626 

Falcon— As falcons to the lure VA 1027 

Which like a falcon R L 506 

as fowl hear falcon's bells " 511 



Fall — Hindering their present fall R L 551 

with their fresh falls' haste " 650 

not in smiling pomp, nor falls Son 124 6 
And falls through wind before the 

. fall Should be PP 10 6 

By shallow rivers, by whose falls " 20 7 

Pa«— Fair fall the wit VA 472 

mellow plum doth fall " 527 

fall to the earth " 546 

He on her belly falls " 594 

and going I shall fall " 719 

But if thou fall " 721 

you will fall again " 769 

falls an orient drop beside " 981 

rise up and fall R L 466 

falls into thy boundless flood " 653 

shall thereon fall and die " 1139 

why should so many fall " 1483 

For every tear he falls " 1551 

He falls, and bathes the pale fear " 1775 

so fair a house fall to decay Son 13 9 

fall by thy side " 151 12 

for whose dear love I rise and fall " 151 14 

that lets not bounty fall L C 41 

Fall'n — As apt as new-fall'n snow V A 354 

Falleth— she flatly falleth down " 463 

With this, she falleth in the place " 1121 

Falling — like a falling plume " 314 

False — Gives false alarms " 651 

sometime false doth bring " 658 

a false sound enter there " 780 

but thy false dart " 941 

with false bethinking grieves " 1024 

false and full of fraud " 1141 

trustless wings of false desire R L 2 

rash-false heat " 48 

this false lord arrived " 50 

triumph in so false a foe " 77 

suspecteth the false worshippers " 8G 

my false heart bleed " 228 

Unto a view so false " 292 

will prison false desire " 642 

thou traitor, thou false thief " 888 

false slave to false delight " 927 

of this false night's abuses " 1075 

serve thou false Tarqiiin so " 1197 

fear that false hearts have " 1512 

false Sinon's tears " 1560 

and that false Tarquin stain'd " 1743 

as is false women's fashion Son 20 4 

less false in rolling " 20 5 

being false to me " 41 14 

Why should false painting " 67 5 

To show false Art " 68 14 

true love may seem false in this " 72 9 

Thou mayst be false " 92 14 

the false heart's history " 93 7 

that I was false of heart " 109 1 

others' false adulterate eyes " 121 5 

with art's false borrow'd face " 127 6 

with a false esteem " 127 12 

belied with false compare " 130 14 

that is not false I swear " 131 9 

And to this false plague " 137 14 

in the world's false subtleties " 138 4 

And seal'd false bonds " 142 7 

whereon my false eyes dote " 148 5 

' false blood, thou register of lies L C 52 

Of this false jewel " 154 



FALSE 



93 



FAULT 



False— 0, that false fire L C 324 

iu the world's false forgeries P P 1 4 

to this false perjury "33 

False-creeping— False-creeping craft P/j 1517 

Falsehood — To unmask falsehood " 940 

From hands of falsehood Son 48 4 

Why of eye's falsehood " 137 7 

Falsely — That censures falsely " 148 4 

Falseness — Did livery falseness In a 

pride of youth L C 105 

Falser — nor none falser to deface her P P 7 6 
False-speaking — credit her false- 
speaking tongue Son 138 7 
credit her false-speaking tongue P P 1 7 

Faltering— the feeble souls BL 1768 

Fame — espoused to more fame " 20 

should underprop her fame " 53 

to her ears her husband's fame " 105 

a badge of fame " 1054 

shall my fame be bred " 1188 

. that did my fame confound " 1202 

And all my fame " 1203 

with fame and not with fire " 1491 

My fame, and thy perpetual infamy " 1638 

speaking of your fame Son 80 4 

Give my love fame " 100 13 

her fame so to herself L C 243 

fear, law, kindred, fame " 270 

Fame — shall fame his wit Son 84 11 

Familiar — that aftable, ghost " 86 9 

Famine — making a famine "17 

Famisli — But rather famish them VA 20 

Famisli'd — mine eye is famish'd Son 47 3 

Famoused — warrior .... for fight " 25 9 

Fan— To fan and blow them dry VA 52 

Fancy — to be soft fancy's slave P L 200 

by dreadful fancy waking " 450 

Towards this alflicted fancy L C 61 

wounded fancies sent me " 197 

Her fancy fell a-turning P P 16 4 

As well as fancy " 19 4 

Fang — Under whose sharp fangs VA 663 

Fangled — garments, though new- 
fangled ill Son 91 3 

Fanning— Fanning the hairs VA 306 

Fantastic — humour of fantastic wits " 850 

Fantasy — 'tis a causeless fantasy " 897 

Far — he scuds far off " 301 

far off upon a hill " 697 

By this, far off " 973 

Which far exceeds JR L 81 

Far from the purpose " 113 

doth so far proceed " 251 

far poorer than before " 693 

I thus far can dispense " 1279 

Met far from home " 1596 

And far the weaker " 1647 

From far where I abide Son 11 5 

How far I toil " 28 8 

From limits far remote " 44 4 

Thus far the miles " 50 4 

So far from home " 61 6 

From me far off " 61 14 

So far from variation " 76 2 

inferior far to his " 80 7 

How far a modern quill " 83 7 

smell far worse than weeds " 94 14 

more strong, far greater " 119 12 

builded far from accident " 124 5 



Far — Coral is far more red Son 130 2 

a far more pleasing sound " 130 10 

Thus far for love " 136 4 

Thus far I count my gain " 141 13 

Fare — Tarquin fares this night R L 693 

So fares it with this faultful lord " 715 

To ask the spotted princess how 

she fares " 721 

to ask her how she fares " 1594 

Fare well I could not P P 14 6 

Farewell — Bids him farewell V A 580 

Farewell ! thou art too dear Son 87 1 

' Farewell,' quoth she P P 14 5 

Farewell, sweet lass " 18 49 

Then farewell his great renown " 21 48 

Faring— her babe from faring ill Son 22 12 

Far-oil— See those far-off eyes R L 1386 

Farther — still farther off from thee Son 28 8 
For thou not farther " 47 11 

seeing farther than the eye " 69 8 

flesh stays no farther reason " 151 8 

Farthest — Upon the farthest earth " 44 6 
transport me farthest " 117 8 

Fashion — tears may grace the .... R L 1319 

as is false women's fashion Son 20 4 

inviting time our fashion calls " 124 8 

Fast — the green sticks fast V A 527 

twenty looks kept fast " 575 

The dove sleeps fast RL 360 

While in his hold-fast foot " 555 

sour-faced groom to hie as fast " 1334 

that forced him on so fast " 1670 

As fast as thou shalt wane, so fast 

thou grow'st Son 11 1 

And die as fast " 12 12 

As fast as objects " 114 8 

that him as fast doth bind " 134 8 

Fast — eagle, sharp by fast V A 55 

feasting to a public fast P L 891 

Fasten — Nimbly she fastens V A 38 

Fasten'd — So fasten'd in her arms " 63 

Faster — and then it faster rock'd R L 262 

faster than Time wastes life Son 100 13 

Fastly— affiicted fancy fastly drew L C 61 

Fat — that breeds the fat earth's store P i 1837 

Fatal— Wreathed up in fatal folds VA 879 

And kiss'd the fatal knife R L 1843 

Fate — I am the mistress of my fate " 1069 

look upon myself, and curse my 
fate Son 29 4 

Father — this was thy father's guise VA 1177 

Here was thy father's bed " 1183 

I their father had not been R L 210 

Their father was too weak " 865 

doting father of his fruit " 1064 

Till Lucrece' father " 1732 

the father's image lies " 1753 

Thy father die, and not thy father 

thee " 1771 

Then son and father weep " 1791 

The father says ' She's mine " 1795 

You had a father Son 13 14 

decrepit father takes delight " 37 1 

' Father,' she says LC 71 

' father, what a hell " 283 

Fanlt— And 'tis your fault VA 381 

the cold fault cleanly out " 694 

'Tis not my fault " 1003 

The shame and fault R L 238 



FAULT 



94 



FEASTING 



Fault— the fault is thine R L 482 

The fault unknown " 527 

Are nature's faults " 539 

When pattern'd by thy fault " 629 

Men's faults do seldom " ~... 633 

And by their mortal fault " 724 

That all the faults " 804 

Nor fold my fault " 1073 

are their own faults' books " 1253 

Poor women's faults " 1258 

Yet with the fault " 1279 

can give the fault amending " 1614 

All men make faults Son 35 5 

For to thy sensual fault " 35 9 

Of faults conceal'd " 88 7 

forsake me for some fault " 89 1 

Some say, thy fault is youth " 96 1 

Both grace and faults " 96 3 

Thou makest faults graces " 96 4 

grew to faults assured " 118 10 

And in our faults " 138 14 

thy foul faults should find " 148 14 

Lest guilty of my faults " 151 4 

Outfacing faults in love P T 1 8 
our faults in love thus smother'd be " 1 14 

then it is no fault of mine " 3 12 

Faultful— this faultful lord of Rome R L 715 

FaTOur — If thou wilt deign this . ... V A 15 

Some favour, some remorse " 257 

Both favour, savour " 747 

in favour with their stars Son 25 1 

The most sweet favour " 113 10 

dwellers on form and favour " 125 5 

A thousand favours L C 36 

favours to allure his eye P P 4 6 

Farour'd — Were I hard-favour'd V A 133 

Hard-favour'd tyrant " 931 

' "For some hard-favour'd groom RL 1632 

Favourite — Great princes' favourites Son 25 5 

Fawn — Hasting to feed her fawn V A 876 

that I do fawn upon Son 149 6 
Fawn'd — They that fawn'd on him 

before PP 21 49 

Fawneth — lion .... o'er his prey R L 421 

Fear— breeder full of fear VA 320 

for fear of slips " 515 

signs of fear lurk " 644 

fear doth teach it " 670 

wit waits on fear " 690 

The fear whereof doth make " 880 

doubt and bloodless fear " 891 

A second fear through all " 903 

I felt a kind of fear " 998 

thou art so full of fear " 1021 

where is no cause of fear " 1153 

Put fear to valour " 1158 

mother of dread and fear R L 117 

But honest fear " 173 

Here pale with fear " 183 

the fear doth still exceed " 229 

extreme fear can neither fight " 230 

O, how her fear " 257 

tremble with her loyal fear " 261 

Then, childish fear, avauut " 274 

Yet he still pursues his fear " 308 

fear's frost hath dissolution " 355 

confounded in a thousand fears " 456 

With trembling fear " 511 

will make-thee only loved for fear " 610 



Fear— If but for fear of this B L 614 

sweating with guilty fear " 740 

That dying fear " 1266 

a kind of heavy fear " 1435 

Nor ashy-pale the fear " 1512 

weaker with so strong a fear " 1647 

the pale fear in his face " 1775 

Is it for fear to wet a widow's eye Son 9 1 

Who with his fear is put " 23 2 

So I, for fear of trust " 23 5 

I was not sick of any fear " 86 12 

For fear of which " 104 13 

Not mine own fears " 107 1 
Applying fears to hopes, and hopes 

to fears " 119 3 

For fear of harms L C 165 

Of wealth, of filial fear " 270 

all forces, shocks, and fears " 273 

my sober guards and civil fears " 298 

All fears scorn I P P 18 20 

Fear—1 thy death should fear VA 660 

bids them fear no more " 899 

you need not fear " 1083 

he would not fear him " 1094 

It shall not fear " 1154 

no secret bushes fear R L 88 

Who fears a sentence " 244 

Then who fears sinking " 280 

so heedful fear " 281 

The merchant fears, ere rich at 

home " 336 

now I need not fear to die " 1052 

thou wilt be stol'n, I fear Son 48 13 

thati which it fears to lose " 64 14 

to fear the worst of wrongs " 92 5 

that fears no blot " 92 13 

It fears not policy " 124 9 

Yet fear her, thou minion " 126 9 
But, soft! enougli, — too much, I 

fear PP 19 49 

Fear'd— I fear'd thy fortune VA 642 

nor fear'd no hooks R L 103 

still are fear'd for love " 611 

I fear'd by Tarquin's falchion " 1046 

But when I fear'd " 1048 

FearetU — th' other feareth harm " 172 

Fearful — As fearful of him, part V A 630 

Pursue these fearful creatures " 677 

Whereon with fearful eyes " 927 

in this fearful flood R L 1741 

O fearful meditation Son 65 9 

Fearl'ully— Where fearfully the dogs 7^ 886 

The roses fearfully on thorns Son 99 8 

Fearfully PP 18 44 

Fearing — fearing my love's decease VA 1002 

fearing to creep forth " 1036 

Fearing some hard news R L 255 

fearing no such thing " 363 

fearing of Time's tyranny Son 115 9 

the loss thereof still fearing PP 7 10 

Feast— the feast might ever last VA 447 

disturb the feast " 450 

then my eye doth feast Son 47 5 

feasts so solemn and so rare " 52 5 

To any sensual feast " 141 8 

For feasts of love L C 181 

Feast-flnding— Feast-finding min- 
strels RL 817 

Feasting— Thy private feasting " 891 



FEASTING 



95 



FIELD 



Feasting — Justice is feasting R L 906 

all full with feasting Son 75 9 
Feat — With sleided silk feat and 

affectedly L C 48 

Feather — on feathers, flesh, and bone V 4 56 

at stirring of a feather " 302 

with thought's feathers flies B L 1216 

Have added feathers Son 78 7 

Feather'd — wave like .... wings V A 306 

hollow-swelling feather'd breasts B L 1122 

One of her feather'd creatures Son 143 2 

Save the eagle, feather'd king P T 11 

Feature — it shapes tliem to your .... Son 113 12 

Featured — Featured like him " 29 6 

Featureless — Harsh , and rude " 11 10 

Fed — with thy increase be fed VA 170 

eye so full hath fed " 399 

simjile semblance he hath fed " 795 

He fed them with his sight " 1104 

that those shrunk pipes had fed E L 1455 

Within be fed, without be rich Son 146 12 

Fee — his youth's fair fee V A 393 

The honey fee of parting " 538 

hath deserved a greater fee " 609 

but sin ne'er gives a fee R L 913 

now becomes a fee Son 120 13 

Feeble — Thy mark is feeble age V A 941 

Feeble Desire, all recreant R L 710 

faltering feeble souls alive " 1768 

Like feeble age, he reeleth Son 7 10 

Her feeble force PP 19 21 

Feed — why shouldst thou feed V A 169 

Feed where thou wilt " 232 

glutton-like she feeds " 548 

that did feed her sight " 822 

Hasting to feed her fawn " 876 

feeds his vulture folly R L 556 

while the oppressor feeds " 905 

To feed oblivion " 947 

mountain-spring that feeds a dale " 1077 

justice feeds iniquity " 1687 

Feeds on the rarities Son 60 11 
So slialt thou feed on Death, that 

feeds on men " 146 13 

My flocks feed not PP 18 1 

Shepherds feed their flocks " 20 6 

Feeder — Being nurse and feeder V A 446 

Feed'st — Feed'st thy light's flame Son 1 6 

Feedeth — She feedeth on the steam VA 63 

Feeding — by feeding is allay'd Son 56 3 
did I frame my feeding " 118 6 
Feeding on that which doth pre- 
serve " 147 3 

Feel — and canst not feel V A 201 

scorns the heat he feela " 311 

his fair cheek feels " 352 

' why dost thou feelit " 373 

May feel her heart, poor citizen RL 465 

what helpless shame I feel " 756 

though I feel thou art Son 48 10 

which I then did feel " 120 2 

Feel'st— when thou feel'st it cold " 2 14 

Feeling — that the sense of feeling VA 439 

numbs each feeling part " 892 

life and feeling of her passion R L 1317 

Being from the feeling " 1578 

Not by our feeling Son 121 4 

Nor tender feeling "141 6 

some feeling pity L C 178 



Feeling — Feeling it break L C 275 

Feelingly — sorrow then is feelingly 

suflSced R L 1112 

Here feelingly she weeps " 1492 

Feeling-painful— More feeling-pain- 
ful: let it then suflice " 1679 

Fee-simple — And was my own .... L C 144 

Feign — god of both, as poets feign P P 8 13 

Feigned — your feigned tears V A 425 

Fell— in fell battle's rage R L 145 

fell exploits efiecting " 429 

tragedies and murders fell " 766 

by Time's fell hand defaced Son 64 1 

when that fell arrest " 74 1 

but spite of heaven's fell rage L C 13 

J'eZZ— fell I not downright VA 645 

When their glass fell R L 1526 

as she wrought thee, fell a-doting Son 20 10 

that so fell sick of you " 118 14 

laid by his brand and fell asleep " 153 1 

I fell, and yet do question make L C 321 

Then fell she on her back • P P 4 13 

and yet she fell a-turning " 7 16 
And as he fell to her, so fell she to 

him " 11 4 

Her fancy fell a-turning " 16 4 

As it fell upon a day " 21 1 

Fellow — All thy .... birds do sing " -21 25 

Fellowship — And fellowship in woe P Z 790 

Felt — were it with thy hand felt VA 143 

having felt the sweetness " 553 

I felt a kind of fear " 998 

When more is felt than one hath 

power to tell R L 1288 

What freezings have I felt Son 97 3 

Female — proud, as females are VA 309 

to hell, my female evil Son 144 5 

■to hell, my female evil PP 2 5 

Fence — theredshould .... the white R L 63 

Fester — Lilies that fester Son 94 14 

Fetched — And as she fetched breath P P 11 11 

Fetlock— fetlocks shag and long V A 295 

Fever — As burning fevers " 739 

of this madding fever Son 119 8 

My love is as a fever " 147 1 

Augur of the fever's end P T 7 

Few — enjoy'd but of a few R L 22 

' Few words,' quoth she " 1613 

nor none, or few, do hang Son 73 2 

Fickle— It shall be fickle VA 1141 

Dost hold Time's fickle glass Son 126 2 

a fickle maid full pale L C 5 

but not so fair as fickle P P 7 1 

Fortune, cursed fickle dame " 18 15 

Whilst as fickle fortune smiled " 21 29 

Fie—' Fie, no more of love VA 185 

' Fie, lifeless picture " 211 

' Fie, fie,' he says " 611 

' Fie, fie, fond love " 1021 

' Fie, fie, fie,' now would she cry P P 21 13 

Field— The field's chief flower VA 8 

Making ray arms his field " 108 

tempest to the field " 454 

dare not stay the field " 894 

doth challenge that fair field R L 58 

in her fair face's field " 72 

the fields of fruitful Italy " 107 

bold Hector, march'd to field " 1430 

in thy beauty's field Son 2 2 



FIELD 



96 



FIRE 



Field— valleys, dales, and fields P P 20 3 

Fiend— with such foul fiends VA 638 

my angel be turn'd fiend Son 144 9 

night, who, like a fiend " 145 11 

The naked and concealed fiend L C 817 

my angel be turn'd fiend P P 2 9 

Foul precurrer of the fiend P T 6 

Fierce — from the fierce tiger's jaws Son 19 3 
Or some fierce thing " 23 3 

Fiery — Red cheeks and fiery eyes VA 219 

in his fiery race Son 51 11 

Fiery -pointed— the fair and. ... sun P i 372 

Fight^foll'd the god of fight VA 114 

fight brings beauty under " 746 

to use it in the fight JR L 62 

makes them still to fight " 68 

with life's strength doth fight " 124 

can neitlier fight nor fly " 230 

The coward fights " 273 

Desire doth fight with Grace " 712 

an eager combat fight " 1298 

encouraging the Greeks to fight " 1402 

warrior famoused for fight Son 25 9 

'gainst his glory fight " 60 7 

against myself I'll fight ' " 88 3 

that love with love did fight P P 16 5 

vanquish'd men in bloody fight " 18 36 

Fighting — note the fighting conflict F^l 345 

slaves for pillage fighting R L 428 

but fighting outwardly L C 203 

Figure — but figures of delight Son 98 11 

Steal from his figure " 104 10 

Laundering the silken figures L C 17 

Figured — . ... to thee my true spirit Son 108 2 
to take her figured proffer P P 4 10 
Figuring — Figuring that their pas- 
sions L C 199 

Filching — Doubting the filching age (Soft 75 6 
Filed— by all the Muses filed " 85 4 

Smooth not thy tongue with filed 
talk PP 19 8 

Filial— Of wealth, of filial fear L C 270 

Fill — as minutes fill up hours R L 297 

To fill with worm-holes " 946 

although to-day thou fill Son 56 5 

doth the impression fill " 112 1 

Ay, fill it full with wills " 136 6 

Fill'd — 'My daughter' and 'my 

wife' with clamours fill'd R L 1804 

If it were fill'd Son 17 2 

drain'd his blood and fill'd his brow " 63 3 
countenance fill'd up his line " 86 13 

Fillet- Some in her threaden fillet L C 33 

Filleth— she feeds, yet never filleth VA 548 

Filling— coral cisterns filling R L 1234 

Filth— fly with the filth away " 1010 

Find— she in him finds missing V A 605 

in a brake she finds a hound " 913 

Find sweet beginning " 1138 

shall he think to find a stranger 

just _ R L 159 

finds no excuse nor end " 238 

from thence, where it may find " 760 

To find some desperate instrument " 1038 

Will we find out " 1146 

To find a face " 1444 

And who she finds forlorn " 1500 

It cannot be, I find " 1539 

That he finds means " 1561 



Find — Who finds his Lucrece R L 1585 

this refuge let me find " 1654 

Find no determination Son 13 6 
that I in heaven find " 14 8 
To find where your true image " 24 6 
for myself no quiet find " 27 14 
Both find each other " 42 11 
Shall reasons find " 49 8 
will my poor beast then find " 51 5 
your praise shall still find room " 55 10 
To find out shames " 61 7 
and thou shalt find " 77 10 
Wherein it finds a joy " 91 6 
O, what a happy title do I find " 92 11 
thou in this shalt find thy monu- 
ment " 107 13 
when it alteration finds " 116 3 
and find the lesson true " 118 13 
now I find true " 119 9 
And thou shalt find it " 142 4 
thy foul faults should find " 148 14 

find their sepulchres in mud L C 46 

to do will aptly find " 88 

which abroad they find " 137 

that so their shame did find " 187 

All unseen 'gan passage find P P 17 • 6 

A cripple soon can find a halt " 19 10 
Faithful friends are hard to find " 21 34 

Finding — Finding their enemy VA 887 

Feast-finding minstrels R L 817 

Finding thy worth Son 82 6 

Finding the first conceit " 108 13 

Finding myself in honour L C 150 

Fine — to fine the hate of foes R L 936 

belongs to love's fine wit Son 23 14 
the fine point of seldom pleasure " 52 4 

Finger — locks her lily fingers one in 

one VA 228 

He bends her fingers " 476 

the needle his finger pricks R L 319 

As on the finger of a throned queen »S'o?i 96 5 

With thy sweet fingers " 128 3 

O'er whom thy fingers walk " 128 11 

Give them thy fingers " 128 14 

Fire — coals of glowing fire VA 35 

yet her fire must burn " 94 

' all compact of fire " 149 

darts forth the fire " 196 

scornfully glisters like fire " 275 

love's fire doth assuage " 334 

It flash'd forth fire " 348 

set the heart on fire " 388 

To touch the fire " 402 

or in the fire " 494 

do abate the fire " 654 

Mine eyes are turn'd to fire " 1072 

melt at mine eyes' red fire " 1073 

matter is to fire " 1162 

bears the lightless fire R L 4 

sparks of fire do fly " 177 

I enforced this fire " 181 

Against love's fire " 355 

huge fires abide " 647 

Thou blow'st the fire " 884 

That two red fires " 1353 

the fire that burneth here " 1475 

with fame and not with fire " 1491 

His eye drops fire " 1552 

balls of quenchless fire " 1554 



FIRE 



97 



FLIGHT 



Fire — in his fire doth quake Ji L 1556 

hot-burning fire dotli dwell " 1557 

she gives her sorrow iire " 1604 

slight air and purging fire Son 45 1 

nor war's quick fire shall burn " 55 7 

the glowing of such fire " 73 9 

And his love-kindling fire " 153 3 

from this holy fire of love " 153 5 

Where Cupid got new fire " 153 14 

votary took up that fire " 154 5 

Which from Love's fire " 154 10 

Love's fire heats water " 154 14 

Both fire from hence L C 294 

O, that false fire " 324 

is music and sweet fire P P 5 12 

as straw with fire flameth " 7 13 

Ji^ire — wind that fires the torch P L 315 

fire my good one out Son 144 14 

fire my good one out P P 2 14 

Fired — Love's brand new-fired Son 153 9 

Firm — And the firm soil win " 64 7 

Firmly — on that he firmly doted R L 416 

faith was firmly fix'd in love P P 18 11 

First— Struck dead at first VA 250 

who shall cope him first " 888 

who first should dry his tears " 1092 

I should have kill'd him first " 1118 

First red as roses R L 258 

First, like a trumpet " 470 

First, hovering o'er the paper " 1297 

wert thou first created Son 20 9 

The first my thought " 45 3 

that made me first your slave " 58 1 

at first in character was done " 59 8 

At first the very worst " 90 12 

when first your eye I eyed " 104 2 

Since first I saw you fresh " 104 8 

when first I hallow'd " 108 8 

Finding the first conceit " 108 13 

O, 'tis the first "114 9 
mine eye loves it and doth first 

begin " 114 14 

Grows fairer than at first " 119 12 

when first it 'gins to bud P P 13 3 

First-born — With April's first-born 

flowers Son 21 7 

Fish — The fishes spread on it V A 1100 

Fisher — No fisher but the ungrown 

fry forbears " 526 

Pit — season once more fits " 327 

gouts and painful fits R L 856 

shall fit the trespass best " 1613 

which wounded bosoms fits Son 120 12 

Fitted — out of their spheres been 

fitted " 119 7 

Fire— five hundred courses " 59 6 

my five wits nor my five senses " 141 9 

Fix— Will fix a sharp knife RL 1138 

Fixed — Whose beams upon his hair- 
less face are fix'd VA 487 

eyes are sadly fixed jB L 561 

from their fixed places " 1525 

candles fix'd in heaven's air Son 21 12 

with his colour fix'd " 101 6 

it is an ever-fixed mark " 116 5 

and nowhere fix'd L C 27 

was firmly fix'd in love P P 18 11 

Flame— with embracing flames R L 6 

And to the flame " 180 

7 



Flame — Feed'st thy light's flame Son 1 6 

seem'd my flame to qualify " 109 2 

My most full flame " 115 4 

Not one whose flame L C 191 

In a mutual flame P T 24 

Pteme- That flame through water L C 287 

Flameth— as straw with fire PP 7 113 

Flaming — by his flaming torch R L 448 

with a flaming light '• 1627 

Flaming in the phcenix' sight P T 35 

Flank— in his soft flank VA 1053 

nuzzling in his flank " 1115 

Flap-mouth'd — flap-mouth'd mourn- 
er, black and grim " 920 

Flash'd— It flash'd forth fire " 348 « 

Flatly— she flatly falleth down " 463 

Flatter — And flatters her " 978 

one doth flatter thee " 989 

Th' one sweetly flatters R L 172 

To flatter thee " 1061 

Only to flatter fools " 1559 

false Sinon's tears doth flatter " 1560 

So flatter I the swart-complexion'd 

night Son 28 11 

Flatter the mountain-tops " 33 2 

as a dream doth flatter " 87 13 

Every one that flatters thee P P 21 31 

Flatter' d — flatter'd by their leader's 

jocund show RL 296 

by lies we flatter'd be Smi 138 14 

Flatterer — To critic and to flatterer " 112 11 

Flattering— His flattering ' Holla V A 284 

and flattering thoughts retire R L 641 

And with such-like flattering PP 21 41 

Faithful friend from flattering foe " 21 58 
Flattery — your feigned tears, your 

flattery VA 425 

Sweet flattery ! then she loves Son 42 14 

the monarch's plague, this flattery " 114 2 

'tis flattery in my seeing " 114 9 

Flaw — gusts and foul flaws VA 456 

Fled — Love to heaven is fled " 793 

at him should have fled " 947 

her eyes are fled " 1037 

to the world that I am fled Son 71 3 

where is my judgement fled " 148 3 

And blushing fled PP 9 14 
All our evening sport from us 

is fled " 18 47 

Phojnix and the turtle fled P T 23 

Fleece — Till with her own white RL 678 

Ere beauty's' dead fleece Son 68 8 

Fleetest — sorry seasons as thou . . . . " 19 5 

Fleet-foot— Or as the fleet-foot roe VA 561 

Fleeting — a froth of fleeting joy RL 212 

the pleasure of the fleeting year Son 97 2 

Fleet-wing'd— Forfleet-wing'ddutyPi 1216 

Flesh — feathers, flesh, and bone VA 56 

My flesh is soft and plump " 142 

The flesh being proud R L 712 

with her nails her flesh doth tear " 739 

the dull substance of my flesh Son 44 1 

Shall neigh,— no dull flesh " 51 11 

flesh stays no farther reason " 151 8 

Flew — observed as they flew ,L C 60 

Flight— tender smell or speedy .... R L 695 

cross Tarquin in his flight " 968 

soars of battle 'scapeth by the 

flight L C 244 



FLINT 



98 



FOLLY 



Flinfr-Nay, more than flint VA 200 

His falchion on a flint B L 176 

As from this cold flint " 181 

Flint-liearted — ' 0, pity,' 'gan she 

cry, ' flint-hearted boy VA 95 

Flinty — flinty, hard as steel " 199 

Flock — among a flock of sheep " 685 

My flocks feed not P P 18 1 

Flocks all sleeping " 18 42 

shepherds feed their flocks " 20 6 

Flood— jewel in the flood VA 82-1 

drown'd him in the flood R L 266 

into thy boundless flood " 653 

forward like a gentle flood " 1118 

no flood by raining slaketh " 1677 

in this fearful flood " 1741 

and gave the flood L C 44 

why was not I a flood P P 6 14 

Flood-gates— But through the VA 959 

Flourish — the flourish set on youth Son 60 9 

Plow— And to his flow P L 651 

Thus ebbs and flows " 1569 

an eye, unused to flow Son 30 5 

Flow'd — downward flow'd apace L C 284 

Flower— The fleld's chief flower VA 8 

gardens full of flowers " 65 

Fair flowers that are not " 131 

These forceless flowers " 152 

fresh flowers being shed " 665 

thou pluck'st a flower " 946 

No flower was nigh " 1055 

The flowers are sweet " 1079 

A purple flower sprung up " 1168 

the new-sprung flower " 1171 

' Poor flower,' quoth she " 1177 

my sweet love's flower " 1188 

take root with precious flowers P L 870 

Each flower moisteu'd " .... 1227 

against the wither'd flower " 1254 

that the flower hath kill'd " 1255 

But flowers distiU'd Son 5 13 

would bear your living flowers " 16 7 

With April's first-born flowers " 21 7 

is no stronger than a flower " 65 4 

and died as flowers do now " 68 2 

To thy fair flower " 69 12 

The summer's flower " 94 9 

But if that flower " 94 11 

Of difierent flowers " 98 6 

More flowers I noted " 99 14 

Of bird, of flower, of shape " 113 6 

or flowers with flowers gather'd " 124 4 

have been a spreading flower L C 75 

and gave him all my flower " 147 

Sweet rose, fair flower P P 10 1 

A flower that dies " 13 3 

a gloss, a glass, a flower " 13 5 

As flowers dead lie wither'd " 13 9 

shine, sun, to succour flowers " 15 16 

A cap of flowers " 20 11 

Flown — to hell is flown away Son 145 12 

Fluxive — bathed she in her fluxive 

eyes i C 50 

Fly — fly they know not whither VA 304 

strive to oyer-fly them " 324 

They basely fly " 894 

away she flies " 1027 

sparks of fire do fly R L 177 

<!an neither fight nor fly " 230 



Fly— the eyes fly from their lights P L 461 

He faintly flies " 740 

fly with the filth away " 1010 

wheresoe'er they fly " ioi4 

determining which way to fly " 1150 

with thought's feathers flies " 1216 

and from his lips did fly " 1406 

and through her wounds doth fly " 1728 

A crow that flies So7i 70 4 

ignorance aloft to fly " 78 6 

which flies before her face " 143 7 

that which flies from thee " 143 9 

the caged cloister fly L C 249 

from his heart did fly " 325 

Fly — poor flies in his fume VA 316 

Flying — The timorous flying hare VA 674 

Foain — They join and shoot their 

foam P L 1442 

Foe— so white a foe VA 364 

that ever threat his foes " 620 

to amaze his foes " 684 

if his foes pursue him " 699 

triumph in so false a foe Pi 77 

a parley to his heartless foe " 471 

to fine the hate of foes " 986 

to see his friends his foes " 988 

to scratch her wicked foe " 1035 

■srtll kill myself, thy foe " 1196 

to ban her cruel foes " 1460 

ta'en prisoner by the foe " ..... 1609 

revenged on my foe " ^(583 

the hateful foe bewray'd " 1698 

that should have slain her foe " 1827 

Thyself thy foe Son 1 8 

yet we must not be foes " 40 14 

even so as foes commend " 69 4 

from my face she turns my foes " 139 11 
Faithful friend from flattering 

foe PP 21 58 

Foggy — vaporous and foggy Night PX 771 

Foil — which remain'd the foil L C 153 

Foil'd— foil'd the god of flght VA 114 

victories once foil'd Son 25 10 

she foil'd the framing P P 7 15 

Foisou — spring and .... of the year Son 53 9 

Foist — What thou dost foist upon us " 123 6 

Fold— The sheep are gone to fold VA 532 

Wreathed up in fatal folds " 879 

in her lips' sweet fold Jt L 679 

PoM— Fold in the object VA 822 

Nor fold my fault P L 1073 

Here folds she up " 1310 

Folded — Shame folded up " 675 

Of folded schedules L C 43 

Follow — What follows more VA 54 

imagination she did follow " 975 

shame that follows sweet delight P Z 357 

temptation follows where thou art Son 41 4 

To follow that which flies " 143 7 

Doth follow night " 145 11 

Follow'd— That it as gentle day " 145 10 

Follotving — What following sorrow P 1/ 186 

following where he haunted L C 130 

Folly— love is wise in folly VA 838 

feeds his vulture folly P L 556 

folly lurk in gentle breasts " 851 

His time of folly " 992 

wound his folly's show " 1810 

folly, age, and cold decay Son 11 6 



FOLLY 



99 



FOR 



Folly — And folly, doctor-like, con- 
trolling skill Son 66 10 

Fond—' Fie, fie, fond love VA 1021 

are with gain so fond R L 134 

Or Tvhat fond beggar " 216 

, and full of fond mistrust " 284 

■which fond desire doth scorch " 314 

True grief is fond " 1094 

Thy heat of lust, fond Paris " 1473 

Or who is he so fond Son 3 7 

Being fond on praise " 84 14 

Fondling—' Fondling,' she saith VA 229 

Fondly— how fondly I did dote R L 207 

Food — that pines beholding food " 1115 

my thoughts as food to life Son 75 1 

Fool— The poor fool prays her VA 578 

how much a fool was I " 1015 

and teach the fool " 1146 

merry fools to mock him jB L 989 

servants to shallow fools " 1016 

Only to flatter fools " 1559 

' Fool, fool !' quoth she " 1568 

my unsounded self, supposed a fool " 1819 

So true a fool is love Son 57 13 

Love's not Time's fool " 116 9 

I witness call the fools of time " 124 13 

Thou blind fool. Love " 137 1 

fools that in the imagination set L C 136 

what fool is not so wise PP 3 13 

ah, fool too froward " 4 14 

Foolish — and uttering .... things R L 1813 

Dissuade one foolish heart Son 141 10 

Foolish-witty- love is wise in folly, 

foolish-witty VA 838 

Foot — or as the fleet-foot roe " 561 

when thou hast on foot " 679 

While in his hold-fast foot R L 555 

to the base shrub's foot " 664 

he sets his foot upon the light " 673 

A hand, a foot, a face " 1427 

under Pyrrhus' proud foot lies " 1448 

although my foot did stand Son 44 5 

can hold his swift foot back " 65 11 

Of hand, of foot, of lip " 106 6 

Footed — whate'er thou wilt, swift- 
footed Time " 19 6 

Footing — and yet no footing seen V A 148 

The earth, in love with thee, thy 
footing trips " 722 

For — this favour for thy meed " 15 

He, red for shame " 36 

For to a pretty ear " 74 

ready for his pay " 89 

More thirst for drink than she for 

this good turn " 92 

And begg'd for that " 102 

for my sake hath learn'd " 105 

For mastering her " 114 

for then I were not for thee " 137 

beauty for the use " 164 

Herbs for their smell " 165 

For, where they lay " 176 

make a shadow for thee " 191 

for stone at rain relenteth " 200 

for one poor kiss " 207 

And one for interest " 210 

For men will kiss " 216 

how doth she now for wits " 249 

What cares he now for curb " 285 



For — For rich caparisons V A 286 

For nothing else " 288 

For through his mane " 305 

For lovers say, the heart " 329 

For all askance " 342 

For one sweet look " 371 

' For shame,' he cries " 379 

For all my mind " 883 

For I have heard " 413 

For where a heart " 426 

For from the stillitory " 443 

For looks kill love " 464 

For sharply he did think " 470 

For on the grass " 473 

But for thy piteous lips " 504 

kiss each other, for this cure " 505 

for fear of slips " 515 

Say, for non-payment " 521 

For pity now she can " 577 

For my sick heart " 584 

mounted for the hot encounter " 596 

For where Love reigns " 649 

For there his smell " ...... 691 

For misery is trodden on " 707 

for thou Shalt not rise " 710 

For love can comment " 714 

Cynthia for shame ' " 728 

For stealing moulds " 730 

for framing thee so fair " 744 

For, by this black-faced night " 773 

For know, my heart " 779 

You do it for increase " 791 

for Love to heaven is fled " 793 

for having so offended " 810 

For lovers' hours are long " 842 

For who hath she " 847 

She hearkens for his hounds and 

for his horn " 868 

For now she knows " 883 

rate the boar for murther " 906 

asks the weary caitiff for his 

master _ " 914 

curse thee for this stroke " 945 

for thy mortal vigour " 953 

consulting for foul weather " 972 

For now reviving joy " 977 

and grave for kings " 995 

For he being dead " 1019 

Struggling for passage " 1047 

For oft the eye mistakes " 1068 

my grief for one " 1069 

still looketh for a grave " 1106 

For every little grief " 1179 

For he the night before R L 15 

For by our ears our hearts oft 

tainted be " 38 

beauty would blush for shame " 54 

For unstain'd thoughts do seldom 

dream " 87 

For that he colour'd with his high 

estate " 92 

he pineth still for more " 98 

so greets heaven for his success " 112 

He makes excuses for his being 

there " 114 

For then is Tarquin brought " 120 

For after supper long he questioned " 122 

Despair to gain doth traffic oft for 

gaining " 131 



FOR 



100 



FOR 



For — That one for all, or all for one It L 144 

As life for honour " 145 

Honour for wealth " ..... 146 

for that which we expect " 149 

all for want of wit " 153 

And for himself himself he must 

forsake " 157 

hold it for no sin " 209 

For one sweet grape " 215 

Urging the worser sense for van- 
tage still " 249 

And gazed for tidings " 254 

Why hunt I then for colour or ex- 
cuses " 267 

He takes for accidental things of 

trial ' " 326 

That for his prey " 342 

for standing by her side " 425 

slaves for pillage fighting " 428 

That even for anger " 478 

Shall plead for me " 480 

For those thine eyes betray thee " 488 

marks thee for my earth's delight " 487 

For in thy bed " 514 

For lawful policy remains enacted " 529 

' Then, for thy husband " 533 

For marks descried " 538 

for his sake spare me " 582 

for thine own sake leave me " 583 

For stones dissolved to water do 

convert " 592 

For kings, like gods, should govern " 602 

only loved for fear ■ " 610 

are fear'd for love " 611 

If but for fear of this " 614 

For princes are the glass " 615 

Authority for sin, warrant for 

blame " 620 

For it was lent thee " 627 

I sue for exiled majesty's repeal " 640 

For light and lust are deadly " 674 

For with the nightly linen " G80 

Unapt for tender smell " 695 

For there it revels " 713 

The guilty rebel for remission prays " 714 

For now against himself " 717 

hates himself for his offence " 738 

looks for the morning light " 745 

' For day,' quoth she " 747 

For they their guilt " 754 

Black stage for tragedies " 766 

dark harbour for defame " 768 

For Collatine's dear love " 821 

a theme for disputation " 822 

Yet for thy honour " 842 

For it had been dishonour " 844 

O uulook'd-for evil " 846 

The sweets we wish for " 867 

such numbers seek for thee " 896 

cry out for thee " 902 

no time for charitable deeds " 908 

For who so base ' " 1000 

For greatest scandal " 1006 

For me, I force not " 1021 

For if I die " 1032 

for yielding so " 1036 

more vent for passage of her breath " 1040 

Yet for the self-same purpose " 1047 

that is gone for which I sought " 1051 



For — For me, I am the mistress R L 1069 

For day hath nought to do " 1092 

drowns for want of skill " 1099 

For mirth doth search " 1109 

For burden-wise I'll hum " 1133 

' And for, poor bird " 1142 

both were kept for heaven " 1166 

shall for him be spent " 1182 

For in my death " 1189 

And, for my sake " 1197 

For fleet-wing'd duty " 1215 

For why her face wore sorrow's 

livery " 1222 

For men have marble " 1240 

dost weep for grief " 1272 

For more it is " 1286 

for I have them here " 1290 

For then the eye interprets " 1325 

For Lucrece thought " 1344 

For now 'tis stale to sigh " 1362 

Pausing for means " 1365 

made for Priam's Troy " 1367 

For Helen's rape " 1369 

Shed for the slaughter'd husband " 1376 

As, but for loss " 1420 

For much imaginary work was 

there " 1422 

That for Achilles' image " 1424 

Stood for the whole " 1428 

for trespass of thine eye " 1476 

For one's offence " 1483 

For sorrow, like a heavy-hanging 

bell " 1493 

For perjured Sinon " 1521 

for his wondrous skill " 1528 

' For even as subtle Sinon " 1541 

For every tear he falls " 1551 

For Siuon in his fire " 1556 

She looks for night, and then she 

longs for morrow " 1571 

' For in the dreadful dead of dark " 1625 

'For some hard-favour'd groom " 1632 

plead for justice there " 1649 

' And for my sake " 1681 

For she that was thy Lucrece " 1682 

For sparing justice " ....; 1687 

For 'tis a meritorious fair design " 1692 

for daughter or for wife " 1792 

He weeps for her, for she was only 

mine " 1798 

For sportive words " 1813 

is woe the cure for woe " 1821 

For his foul act " 1824 

For where is she so fair Son 3 5 
Forhavingtraflic with thyself alone " 4 9 
For never-resting time leads sum- 
mer on "55 
That's for thyself "67 
be it ten for one "68 
for thou art much too fair " 6 13 
Is it for fear to wet a widow's eye "91 
for still the world enjoys it " 9 10 
For shame ! deny that " 10 1 
Who for thyself art so unprovident " 10 2 
For thou art so possessed " 10 5 
for love of me " 10 13 
whom Nature hath not made for 

store " 11 9 

she carved thee for her seal " 11 13 



FOR 



101 



FOR 



For — for love of 3'ou Son 

For beauty's pattern " 

Aud for a woman wert thou " 

she prick'd thee out for women's 

pleasure " 

heaven itself for ornament " 

For all that beauty " 

As I, not for myself, but for thee 

will " 

So I, for fear of trust " 

Who plead for love aud look for 

recompense " 

For through the painter must you 

see " 

good turns eyes for eyes have done " 
and thine for me " 

Unlook'd for joy in that I honour 

most " 

For at a frown " 

famoused for fight " 

•all the rest forgot for which he 

toil'd " 

repose for limbs " 

For then my thoughts " 

For thee and for myself " 

For thy sweet love remember'd " 
For precious friends hid " 

Reserve them for my love, not for 

their rhyme " 

Theirs for their style I'll read, his 

for his love " 

him for this my love " 

For no man well of such a salve 

can speak " 

For to thy sensual fault " 

For whether beauty " 

For every vulgar paper " 

For who's so dumb " 

Even for this " 

if for my love " 

I cannot blame thee for my love 

thou usest " 

For still temptation follows " 

And for my sake " 

my friend for my sake " 

both for my sake " 

For all the day " 

For then, despite of space " 

For nimble thought can jump " 

For when these quicker elements " 
is famish'd for a look " 

For thou not farther than my 

thoughts 
For truth proves thievish for a, 

prize so dear 
For that same groan 
But love, for love 
For blunting the fine point 
But you like none, none you for 

constant heart 
For that sweet odour 
But, for their virtue 
watch the clock for you 
labouring for invention 
but for his scythe to mow 
ever for thy sake 
For thee watch I 
And for this sin 
And for myseK 



15 


13 


19 


12 


20 


9 


20 


13 


21 


3 


22 


5 


22 


10 


23 


5 



24 


5 


24 


9 


24 


10 


25 


4 


25 


8 


25 


9 


25 


12 


27 


2 


27 


5 


27 


14 


29 


13 


30 


6 



32 


14 


33 


13 


34 


7 


35 


9 


37 


5 


38 


4 


38 


7 


39 


5 


40 


5 


40 


6 


41 


4 


42 


7 


42 


8 


42 


12 


43 


2 


44 


3 


44 


7 


45 


5 


47 


3 



47 11 



48 


14 


50 


13 


51 


12 


52 


4 


53 


14 


54 


4 


54 


9 


57 


6 


59 


3 


60 


12 


61 


12 


61 


13 


62 


3 


62 


7 



85 13 

85 14 

86 2 

87 1 
87 5 



For — that for myself I praise Son 62 13 
For such a time " 63 9 
for restful death I cry " 66 1 
For she hath no exchequer " 67 11 
him as for a map " 68 13 
For slander's mark " 70 2 
For canker vice " 70 7 
No longer mourn for me " 71 1 
for I love you so " 71 6 
For you in me " J2 4 
do more for me " 72 6 
That you for love speak well " 72 10 
For I am shamed " 72 13 
Which for memorial " 74 4 
And for the peace " 75 8 
starved for a look '' 75 10 
For as the sun " 76 13 
invoke thee for my Muse " 78 1 
thank him not for that " 79 13 
This silence for my sin " 83 9 
For I impair not beauty " 83 11 
others for the breath of words re- 
spect ' 
Me for my dumb thoughts ' 
Bound for the prize ' 
too dear for my possessing ' 
For how do I hold thee ' 
And for that riches where is my 

deserving ' 
For bending all my loving thoughts '' 

That for thy right ' 

forsake me for some fault ' 

For thee, against myself ' 

For I must ne'er love him ' 

do not drop in for an after-loss ' 

For term of life ' 

For it depends ' 

For there can live no hatred '' 
For sweetest things turn sourest ' 

for their habitation " 

and for true things deem'd " 

For summer and his pleasures ' 

for complexion dwells " 

condemned for thy hand " 

But, for his theft " 

For thy neglect of truth " 
Excuse not silence so, for 't lies in 

thee " 

For to no other pass " 

For as you were " 

For fear of which " 

And, for they look'd " 

For we, which now behold " 

antiquity for aye his page " 

bring water for my stain " 

leave for nothing all thy sum " 
For nothing this wide universe I 

call " 
O, for my sake " 
for my life provide " 
For what care I " 
For it no form delivers " 
For if it see " 
And for that sorrow " 
For if you were " 
For why should others' false adul- 
terate eyes " 121 5 
For thy records and what we see 
doth lie " 123 11 



87 



90 
92 
92 
93 
94 
95 
96 
97 
99 
99 
99 
101 

101 
103 
104 
104 
106 
106 
108 
109 
109 

109 
111 
111 
112 
113 
113 
120 
120 



10 
14 
1 

13 

14 

4 

2 

4 

5 

13 

10 

8 

11 

4 

6 

12 

2 

10 
11 
2 
13 
11 
13 
12 



FOR 



102 



FOREST 



For— It might for Fortune's 'bastard aSIsti 124 2 
Which die for goodness, who have 

lived for crime " 124 14 

great bases for eternity " 125 3 

For compound sweet " 125 7 

only me for thee " 125 12 

For since each hand " 127 5 

For well thou know'st " 131 3 

To mourn for me " 132 11 

For that deep wound " 133 2 

for I, being pent in thee " 133 13 

For thou art covetous " 134 6 

to write for me " 134 7 

came debtor for my sake " 134 11 

Thus far for love " 136 4 

For nothing hold me " 136 11 

for my name is 'Will' " 136 14 

For, if I should despair " 140 9 

For they in thee " 141 2 

lauguish'd for her sake " 145 3 

For that which longer " 147 2 

For I have sworn thee fair " 147 13 

for thy sake " 149 4 

for now I know thy mind " 149 13 

For, thou betraying me " 151 5 

for whose dear love " 151 14 

For all my vows are oaths " 152 7 

For I have sworn deep oaths " 152 9 

For I have sworn thee fair " 152 13 

The boy for trial " 153 10 

the bath for my help lies " 153 13 

For men diseased " 154 12 

Came there for cure " 154 13 

For some, untuck'd, descended L C 31 

For on his visage was in little 

drawn " 90 

For maiden-tongued he was " 100 

Came for additions " 118 

For his advantage still " 123 

And dialogued for him " 132 

Experience for me many bulwarks 

builded " 152 

For when we rage " 160 

For fear of harms " 165 

For further I could say " 169 

For feasts of love " ISl 

For these, of force, must " 223 

What me your minister, for you 

obeys " 229 

For she was sought by spirits " 236 

Must for your victory ■' 258 

For thou art all " 266 

For, lo, his passion " 295 

What I should do again for such a 

sake " 322 

For being both to me PP 2 11 

Vows for thee broke "34 

gone to the hedge for shade "62 

tarriance for Adonis made "64 

For his approach "68 

Paler for sorrow "93 

For Aden's sake "94 

I weep for thee " 10 7 

For why thou left'st me nothing " 10 8 

For why I craved nothing " 10 10 

For methinks thou stay'st too long " 12 12 
beauty blemish'd once 's for ever 

lost " 13 11 

for I supp'd with sorrow " 14 6 



For — a word for shadows like myself PP 14 11 

For she doth welcome daylight " 15 7 

For why, she sigh'd " 15 12 

Yet not for me, shine sun " 15 16 

For of the two the trusty knight " 16 11 

For now my song is ended " 16 16 

Vow, alack ! for youth unmeet " 17 13 

Thou for whom Jove would swear " 17 15 

And deny himself for Jove " 17 17 

Turning mortal for thy love " 17 18 

For now I see " 18 16 

All our love is lost, for Love is dead " 18 48 

For a sweet content " 18 51 

Other help for him " 18 54 

doth stand for nought " 19 42 

To sin and never for to saint " 19 44 

For her griefs so lively shown " 21 17 

For these dead birds sigh a prayer P T 67 

Forag:e — she begins to forage V A 554 

Forbade — my tongue to speak R L 1648 

Forbade the boy P P 9 8 

Forbear — the ungrown fry forbears V A 526 

thou might'st my seat forbear Son 41 9 

forbear to glance thine eye " 139 6 

Forbid— But I forbid thee " 19 8 

That god forbid that made me " 58 1 

spoil of beauty can forbid " 65 12 

in honour so forbid L C 150 

Forbidden — That use is not forbid- 
den usury Son 6 5 
Forbidding — all these poor forbid- 

dings RL 323 

Forbod— To be forbod the sweets L C 164 

Force — desire doth lend her force V A 29 

then force must work ray way R L 513 

by force, by fraud, or skill " 1243 

Sweet love, renew thy force So7i 56 1 

some in their body's force " 91 2 

For these, of force L C 223 

did her force subdue " 248 

The aloes of all forces " 273 

Her feeble force will yield P P 19 21 

Force — Perforce will f(»rce it V A 72 

Lucrece must I force to my desire R L 182 

doth force a further strife " 689 

I force not argument a straw " 1021 

Forced — Forced to content V A 61 

Forced it to tremble R L 261 

This forced league " 689 

acquit my forced offence " 1071 

That was not forced " 1657 

forced him on so fast " 1670 

How may this forced stain " 1701 

AVhere thou art forced Son 41 12 

Or forced examples L C 157 

O, that forced thunder " 325 

Forceless — These forceless flowers VA 152 

Ford — Deep sounds make lesser 

noise than shallow fords R L 1329 

'Fore — The eyes 'fore duteous Son 7 11 

Fore-bemoaned— of moan " 30 11 

Fore-betray'd— betray the L C 328 

Forego — Mine eyes their light R L 228 

Foregoing — foregoing simple savour Son 125 7 

Foregone — grieve at grievances . . . . " 30 9 

Forehead— Brand not my forehead R L 1091 

Foreknowing— Foreknowing well VA 245 

Foresight — But her foresight R L 728 

Forest — Have from the forests shook (Sore 104 4 



FORESTALL 



103 



FORWARD 



Forestall— Thus I forestall tliee 
could not forestall thy will 

Foretell — Foretell new storms 

Forfeit — Supposed as forfeit 
Myself I'll forfeit 

Forged— Lust full of forged lies 
hast thou forged hooks 



RL 



484 

" 728 

" 1589 

Son 107 4 
" 134 3 

VA 804 

Sm 137 7 



Forgery— the weak brain's forgeries i2 i ..... 460 

treason, forgery, and shift " 920 

in the world's false forgeries P P 1 4 

Forget — her joints forget to bow V A ..... 1061 

for fear of trust forget to say Son 23 5 

dear love, forget me quite " 72 3 

Forget'st— that thou so long " 100 1 

Forgetful — return, forgetful Muse " 100 5 

Forgetfuluess— Were to import " 122 14 

Forgetting — .... shame'spure blush K^ 558 

Forging — Till forging Nature " 729 

Forgive — I do forgive thy robbery Son 40 9 

Forgot — that will never be forgot B L 536 

And never be forgot " 1644 

And all the rest forgot Son 25 12 

in your sweet thoughts would be 

forgot " 71 7 

Forgot upon your dearest love " 117 3 

think on thee, when I forgot " 149 3 

All my merry jigs are quite forgot P P 18 9 

Forgotten — each part will be ... . Son 81 4 

Forlorn — in thine own law forlorn VA ...... 251 

Dian cloudy and forlorn " 725 

that was but late forlorn " 1026 

And who she iinds forlorn It L 1500 

And from the forlorn world Son 33 7 

Cytherea, all in love forlorn P P 6 3 

She, poor bird, as all forlorn " 21 9 

Forlorn — Love hath forlorn me " 18 21 

Form- such saintlike forms R L 1519 

So fair a form " 1530 

no form of thee hast left Son 9 6 

your sweet form should bear " 13 8 

Thy beauty's form " 24 2 

form of well-refined pen " 85 8 

To set a form " 89 6 

time and outward form " 108 14 

it no form delivers " 113 5 

dwellers on form and favour " 125 6 

were beauteous as his form L C 99 

which did no form receive " 241 

all strange forms receives " 303 

Form — that face should form another Son 3 2 
thy shadow's form form happy 
show " 43 6 

Formal — nor tied in formal plat L C 29 

Form'd — And therefore are they 

form'd RL 1241 

Is form'd in them by force " 1243 

Former — sharpen'd in his .... might Son 56 4 
burthen of a former child " 59 4 

the wits of former days " 59 13 

dressings of a former sight " 123 4 

Forsake — swiftly doth forsake him V A 321 

himself he must forsake R L 157 

beauties do themselves forsake Son 12 11 

thou didst forsake me " 89 1 

Forsaken— I am forsaken " 133 7 

Forsook— himself himself forsook VA 161 

the shadow had forsook them " ... . 176 

she in that sense forsook R L 1538 

Forswore — A woman I forswore P P 3 5 



Forswore — I forswore not thee P P 3 6 

Forsworn— steal a kiss and die .... V A 726 

faith unhappily forsworn Son 66 4 

though thou art forsworn " 88 4 

thou know'st I am forsworn " 152 1 

But thou art twice forsworn " 152 2 

If love make me forsworn P P 5 1 

Though to myself forsworn "53 

Fort — Thy never-conquer'd fort R L 482 

If in this blemish'd fort " 1175 

Forth— Thine eye darts forth VA 196 

brought forth thee " 204 

blaze forth her wrong " 219 

But, lo, from forth " 259 

And forth she rushes " 262 

drink the air, and forth again " 273 

It flash'd forth fire " 348 

before one leaf put forth " 415 

to creep forth again " 1036 

To set forth that RL 32 

Pufis forth another wind " 315 

Rushing from forth a cloud " 373 

peeping forth this tumult to behold " 447 

From forth dull sleep " 450 

breathes she forth her spite " 762 

Is to let forth " 1029 

stol'n from forth thy gate " 1068 

forth with bashful innocence " 1341 

gleam'd forth their ashy light " 1378 

She throws forth Tarquin's name " 1717 

from forth her fair streets " 1834 

And make me travel forth Son 34 2 

let him bring forth " 38 11 

Shall you pace forth " 55 10 

by that which I bring forth " 72 13 

my Muse brings forth " 103 1 

that put'st forth all to use " 134 10 

Breathed forth the sound " 145 2 

those impediments stand forth L C 269 

Forth their dye PP 18 40 

And set thy person forth to sell " 19 12 

Forthwith— forthwith he lighteth R L 173 

Fortified- Which her visage L C 9 

Fortify— And fortify yourself Son 16 3 

do I now fortify " 63 9 

Fortress'd — Are weakly fortress'd R L 28 

Fortune — I fear'd thy fortune V A 642 

Eeckoning his fortune R L 19 

Love and Fortune be my gods " 351 

their cursed-blessed fortune " 866 

Cancell'd my fortunes " 934 

the giddy round of Fortune's wheel " 952 

Nor can I fortune to brief min- 
utes tell Son 14 5 
Whilst I, whom fortune " 25 3 
with fortune and men's eyes " 29 1 
And shalt by fortune " 32 3 
by fortune's dearest spite " 37 3 
Join with the spite of fortune " 90 3 
the very worst of fortune's might " 90 12 
do you with Fortune chide " 111 1 
It might for Fortune's bastard " 124 2 
O frowning Fortune, cursed fickle PP 18 15 
Whilst as fickle Fortune smiled " 21 29 
But if Fortune once do frown " 21 47 
Forty— When forty winters Son 2 1 

Forward — Deep woes roll forward RL 1118 

all forw'ards do contend Son 60 4 

The forward violet " 99 1 



FOUGHT 



104 



FRESH 



Fought — the strand of Dardan, 

where they fought R L 1436 

Foul— foul, or wrinkled-old VA 133 

Gusts and foul flaws " 456 

with sach foul fiends " 638 

desire's foul nurse " 773 

consulting for foul weather " 972 

To wash the foul face ' " 983 

'Tis he, foul creature " 1005 

The foul boar's conquest " 1030 

But this foul, grim " 1105 

ambitious, foul infirmity RL 150 

with lust's foul charm " 173 

foul dishonour " 198 

including all foul harms " 199 

Full of foul hope " 284 

Who, like a foul usurper " 412 

his foul thoughts might compass " 346 

but his foul appetite " 546 

Yet, foul night-waking cat " 554 

not to foul desire " 574 

With foul otfenders " 612 

foul sin may say " 629 

lived by foul devouring " 700 

with foul insurrection " 722 

Thou foul abettor - " 886 

My life's foul deed " 1208 

By foul enforcement " 1623 

with the foul act dispense " 1704 

For his foul act " 1824 

Tarquin's foul offence " 1852 

limbecks foul as hell within Son 119 2 

Fairing the foul " 127 6 

And all they foul that thy " 132 14 

upon so foul a face " 137 12 

with her foul pride " 144 8 

thy foul faults should find " 148 14 

against the truth so foul a lie " 152 14 

the patterns of his foul beguiling L C 170 

of his foul adulterate heart " 175 

Foul precurrer of the fiend P T 6 

Foul-caiikering — .... rust V A 767 

Foul-deflled— my foul-defiled blood R L 1029 

Fouler — and they thy fouler grave " 661 

Foul-reekiuar — furnace of .... smoke " 799 

Found — And swear I found you " 1635 

my friend hath found that loss Son 42 10 
'twixt a miser and his wealth is 

found " 75 4 

To new-found methods " 76 4 

And found such fair assistance " 78 2 

And found it in thy cheek " 79 11 

1 found, or thought I found " 83 3 
found a kind of meetness " 118 7 
this advantage found " 153 2 
But found no cure " 153 13 

Found yet moe letters LC 47 

are seld or never found P P 13 7 

Fonndation— earth's shakes VA 1047 

Fount— toads infect fair founts R L 850 

a river running from a fount L C 283 

Fountain — where the pleasant foun- 
tains lie V A 234 

Mud not the fountain R L 577 

The poison'd fountain " 1707 

And from the purple fountain " 1734 

and silver fountains mud Son 35 2 

In a cold valley-fountain " 153 4 

all their fountains in my well L C 255 



Four — feeder of the other four VA 446 

never four such lamps " 489 

My life, being made of four Son 45 7 

Fowl— Coucheth the fowl below R L 507 

as fowl hear falcon's bells " 511 

As lagging fowls " 1335 

Every fowl of tyrant wing P T 10 

Fox— Or at the fox VA 675 

Fragrant— a canker in the .... rose Son 95 2 

With a thousand fragrant posies P P 20 10 

Frail — my frail joints shake RL 227 

Frailer — why are frailer spies Son 121 7 

Frailty— All frailties that besiege " 109 10 

Or on my frailties " 121 7 
Frame — with gentle work did frame "51 

My body is the frame " 24 3 

wonder of your frame " 59 10 

did I frame my feeding " 118 6 

frame all thy ways P P 19 25 

Framed — Wherein she framed thee V A 731 

She framed the love P P 1 15 

Framing — For framing thee so fair V A 744 

yet she foil'd the framing P P 7 15 

Frauk — And being frank Son 4 4 

Frantic— Frantic with grief R L 762 

Frauticly — franticly she doteth VA 1059 

Frantic- mad — frantic-mad with 

evermore unrest Son 147 10 

Fraud— false and full of fraud VA 1141 

by force, by fraud or skill R L 1243 

Frauglited— Fraughted with gall P P 18 26 

Free — Free vent of words V A 834 

thy Lucrece is not free R L 1624 

she lends to those are free Son 4 4 

my oblation, poor but free " 125 10 

nor he will not be fx'ee " 134 5 

and yet am I not free " 134 14 

he was, and thereof free L C 100 

but mine own was free " 195 

Free— Or free that soul R L 900 

my life's fair end shall free it " 1208 

Freed — be freed from guilty woe " 1482 

Freedom — Steal thine own freedom VA 160 

the freedom of that right Son 46 4 

that did in freedom stand L C 143 

Freezing — parching heat nor freez- 
ing cold RL 1145 

What freezings have I felt Smi 97 3 
Frenzy — pestilence and frenzies 

wood VA 740 

And his untimely frenzy R L 1675 

Frequent — That I have been Son 117 5 

Fresh — pale with fresh variety V A 21 

fresh beauty for the use " 164 

when in his fresh array " 483 

upon the fresh flowers " 665 

Upon fresh beauty " 796 

doth always fresh remain " 801 

colours fresh and trim " 1079 

with their fresh falls' haste R L 650 

But now that fair fresh mirror " 1760 

the world's fresh ornament Son 1 9 

Whose fresh repair "33 

And that fresh blood " 11 3 

And in fresh numbers " 17 6 

Since first I saw you fresh " 104 8 

My love looks fresh " 107 10 

love in love's fresh case " 108 9 

Fresh to myself L C 76 



FRESH 



105 



FROM 



Fresh — in whose fresh regard L C 213 

lovely, fresh, and green P P 4 2 

Fresher — Some fresher stamps Son 82 8 

Fret — resistance made him fret V A 69 

still he lours and frets " 75 

■when he doth fret. " 621 

the hidden treasure frets " 767 

the wind in greater fury fret P L 648 

Fret — as frets upon an instrument " 1140 

Friend — So white a friend VA 364 

with certain of his friends " 588 

counsel of their friends " 640 

expected of my friends " 718 

a late-embarked friend " 818 

his affairs, his friends, his state P L 45 

were lie not my dear friend " 234 

my kinsman, my dear friend " 237 

and hears no heedful friends " 495 

I rest thy secret friend " 526 

My husband is thy friend " 582 

the humble suppliant's friend " 897 

a thousand thousand friends " ..... 963 

to see his friends his foes " 988 

Myself, thy friend, will kill myself, 

thy foe " 1196 

Here friend by friend in bloody 

channel lies " 1487 

And friend to friend gives unad- 
vised wounds " 1488 

like him witli friends possess'd Son 29 6 
For precious friends hid in death's 

dateless night " 30 6 

I think on thee, dear friend " 30 13 
And all those friends which I 

thought buried " 31 4 

Had my friend's Muse grown " 32 10 
Sutfering my friend for my sake 

to approve her . " 42 8 

my friend hath found that loss " 42 10 

my friend and I are one " 42 13 
the miles are measured from thy 

friend " 50 4 

by thy true-telling friend " 82 12 
To me, fair friend " 104 1 

to try an older friend " 110 11 

Pity me then, dear friend " 111 13 
that deep wound it gives my friend 

and me " 1-33 2 

my sweet'st friend must be " 133 4 

But then my friend's heart " 133 10 
And sue a friend came debtor for 

my sake " 134 11 

both to eacli friend " 144 11 

that I do call my friend " 149 5 

both to each friend P P 2 11 

O yes, dear friend " 10 11 

All thy friends are lapp'd in lead " 21 24 

Is no friend in misery " 21 32 

Faithful friends are hard to find " 21 34 

Every man will be thy friend " 21 35 

He that is thy friend indeed " 21 51 

Faithful friend from flattering foe " 21 58 
Friendly — Sorrow that friendly sighs 

sought still to dry VA 964 

Friendship — and sweet friendship's 

oath P L 569 

In scorn or friendship P P 14 8 

Friglit— fright the silly lamb VA 1098 

They fright him B L 308 



Fright — And fright her iwith con- 
fusion RL 445 

fright her crying babe " 814 

Frighted — As the poor frighted deer " 1149 

From — pluck him from his horse VA 30 

From his soft bosom " 81 

From morn till night " 154 

Seeds spring from seeds " 167 

shines from heaven " 193 

The heat I have from thence " 195 

And when from thence " 227 

from tempest and from rain " 238 

And from her twining arms * " 256 

from forth a copse " 259 

As from a furnace " 274 

lightning from the sky " 348 

my palfrey from the mare " 384 

from his bending crest " 395 

from my unyielding heart " 423 

For from the stillitory " 443 

As if from thence " 488 

from the dangerous year " 508 

buys my heart from me " 517 

nectar from his lips " 572 

stealing moulds from heaven " 730 

Yet from mine ear " 778 

from the sweet embrace " 811 

shooteth from the sky " 815 

from Venus' eye " 816 

From his moist cabinet mounts up " 854 

from whose silver breast " 855 

From whom each lamp " 861 

from their strict embrace " 874 

from her two cheeks fair " 957 

from their dark beds " 1050 

like a vapour from her sight " 1166 

reft from her by death " 1174 

From the besieged Ardea R L 1 

fortress'd from a world of harms " 28 

From thievish ears " 35 

From Venus' doves doth challenge " 58 

virtue claims from beauty beau- 
ty's red " 59 

Proving from world's minority 

their right " 67 

pick no meaning from their part- 
ing looks " 100 

Far from the purpose of his com- 
ing • " 113 

unloose it from their bond " 136 

leap'd from his bed " 169 

That from the cold stone sparks of 

fire do fly " 177 

'As from this cold flint I enforced " 181 

hard news from the warjike band " 255 

beats these from the stage " 278 

He takes it from the rushes " 318 

That shuts him from the heaven " 338 

Hath barr'd him from the blessed 

thing " 340 

So from himself Impiety hath 

wrought " 341 

Hushing from forth a cloud " 378 

From this fair throne to heave " 413 

From forth dull sleep " 450 

From sleep disturbed " 454 

the eyes fly from their lights " 461 

shame that from them no device 

can take " 535 



FROM 



106 



FROM 



From — From earth'a dark ■womb 

some gentle gust doth get RL 549 

blows these pitchy vapours from 

their biding " 550 

She puts the period often from his 

place " 565 

From vassal actors can be wiped 

•away " 608 

From a pure heart command " 625 

That from their own misdeeds 

askance " 637 

wipe the dim mists from thy dot- 
ing eyne " 643 

bids it leap from thence " 760 

as clear from this attaint " 825 

From me by strong assault it is 

bereft " 835 

Coming from thee " 843 

keep them from thy aid " 912 

From the creation to the general 

doom " 924 

To pluck the quills from ancient 

ravens' wings " 949 

coming from a king " 1002 

from her be-tumbled couch she 

started " 1037 

As smoke from iEtna that in air 

consumes " 1042 

which from discharged cannon 

fumes ■ " 1043 

stol'n from forth thy gate " 1068 

As from a mountain-spring that 

feeds " 1077 

desert, seated from the way " 1144 

bark peel'd from the lofty pine " 1167 

wiped the brinish pearl from her 

bright eyes " 1213 

Those tears from thee " 1271 

' Tarquin from hence " 1276 

I commend me from our house in 

grief " 1308 

From that suspicion " 1321 

And from the towers of Troy " 1382 

and from his lips did fly " 1406 

And from the walls of strong-be- 
sieged Troy " 1429 

And from the strand of Dardan " 1436 

be freed from guilty woe " 1482 

stars shot from their fixed places " 1525 

from her tongue ' can lurk ' from 

'cannot' took " 1537 

steal effects from lightless hell " 1555 

beaten from her breast " 1563 

Being from the feeling of her own 

grief brought " 1578 

Met far from home " 1596 

From that, alas, thy Lucrece is not 

free " 1624 

From lips new-waxen pale begins 

to blow " 1663 

From what is past " 1685 

stain be wiped from me " 1701 

acquit me from this chance " 1706 

I from this compelled stain " 1708 

did vail it from the deep unrest " 1725 

date from cancell'd destiny " 1729 

And from the purple fountain Bru- 
tus drew " 1734 

And bubbling from her breast " 1737 



From — to this end from me derived J2 L 1755 

O, from thy cheeks my image thou 

hast torn " 1762 

starts Collatine as from a dream " 1772 

keep him from heart-easing words " 1782 

pluck'd the knife from Lucrece' side " 1807 

childish humour from weak minds 

proceeds " 1825 

from forth her fair streets chased " 1834 

From fairest creatures we desire 

increase Son 1 1 
when from highmost pitch "79 
he reeleth from the day " 7 10 
From his low tract and look " 7 12 
from that which thou departest " 11 2 
when thou from youth convertest " 11 4 
Which erst from heat did canopy " 12 6 
Not from the stars do I my judge- 
ment pluck " 14 1 
But from thine eyes my knowledge 

I derive " 14 9 
If from thyself to store thou 

wouldst convert " 14 12 

As he takes from you " 15 14 

fair from fair sometime declines " 18 7 
Pluck the keen teeth from the 

fierce tiger's jaws " 19 3 

her babe from faring ill " 22 12 

Is from the book of honour razed " 25 11 
my thoughts, from far where I 

abide " 27 5 

I toil, still farther off from thee " 28 8 

From sullen earth, sings hymns " 29 12 

heavily from woe to woe " 30 10 

stol'n from mine eye " 31 6 
And from the forlorn world his 

visage hide " 33 7 

hath mask'd him from me now " 33 12 

which sourly robs from me " 35 14 

steal sweet hours from love's delight " 36 8 

take that honour from thy name " 36 12 

absent from thy heart " 41 2 

From limits far remote " 44 4 

removed from thee " 44-6 

return'd from thee " 45 10 

From hands of falsehood " 48 4 
From whence at pleasure thou 

mayst come " 48 12 

converted from the thing it was " 49 7 

measured from thy friend " 50 4 

being made from thee " 50 8 

when from thee I speed " 51 2 

From where thou art " 51 3 

Since from thee going " 51 13 

send'st from thee " 61 5 
So far from home into my deeds 

to pry " 61 6 

From me far off with others " 61 14 

never cut from memory " 63 11 

jewel from Time's chest lie hid " 65 10 

from these would I be gone " 66 13 

From this vile world " 71 4 

must from you be took " 75 12 
So far from variation or quick 

change " 76 2 

deliver'd from thy brain " 77 11 

From thy behaviour ; beauty " 79 10 
From hence your memory death 

cannot take '■ 81 3 



FROM 



107 



FULL-FED 



From — ^Your name from hence im- 
mortal Son 81 5 
any fear from thence " 86 12 
Be absent from thy walks " 89 9 
husband nature's riches from ex- 
pense " 94 6 
From thee, the pleasure " 97 2 
From you have I been absent " 98 1 
Or from their proud lap pluck them " 98 8 
If not from my love's breath " 99 3 
had stol'n from thee " 99 15 
Have from the forests shook " 104 4 
Steal from his figure " 104 10 
I from myself depart " 109 3 
As from my soul, which " 109 4 
praises from your tongue " 112 6 
farthest from your sight "117 8 
Distill'd from limbecks foul " 119 2 
give them from me " 122 11 
huikled far from accident " 124 5 
breath that from my mistress reeks " 130 8 
Me from myself thy cruel eye hath 

taken " 133 5 
therefore from my face she turns 

my foes " 139 11 

health from their phj'sicians know " 140 8 
Dissuade one foolish heart from 

serving thee " 141 10 

not from those lips of thine " 142 5 

that which flies from thee " 143 9 
Tempteth my better angel from 

my side " 144 6 

being both from me " 144 11 

From heaven to hell is flown " 145 12 

' I hate ' from hate away she threw " 145 13 

random from the truth " 147 12 
O, from what power hast thou this 

powerful might " 150 1 

horrow'd from this holy fire of Love " 153 5 
Which from Love's fire took heat 

perpetual " 154 10 

From off a hill L C 1 

from a sistering vale " 2 

fortified her visage from the sun " 9 

would not break from thence " 34 

from a maund she drew " 36 

If that from him there may be " 68 

his mettle from his rider takes " 107 

from judgement stand aloof " 166 

from many a several fair " 206 

was sent me from a nun " 232 

a river running from a fount " 283 

Both fire from hence " 294 

thunder from his heart " 325 

Tempteth my better angel from 

my side P P 2 6 

each moving sense from idle rest " 15 3 

Ne'er to pluck thee from thy thorn " 17 12 

All our evening sport from us is fled " 18 47 

Scarce I could from tears refrain " 2l 16 

Faithful friend from flattering foe " 21 58 

From this session interdict P T 9 

In a mutual flame from hence " 24 

Front — in summer's front doth sing Son 102 7 

Frost — Sap check'd with frost "57 

Like little frosts S L 331 

fear's frost hath dissolution " 355 

Frosty — but frosty in desire V A 36 

Froth— a froth of fleeting joy R L 212 



Frothy— Whose frothy mouth VA 901 

Froward — the froward infant still'd " 562 

when most his choice is froward " 570 

ah, fool too froward P P 4 14 

Frown— wounding of a frown VA 465 

Foul words and frowns " 573 

For at a frown they in their glory 



die 



Son 



VA 



Son 
PP 



VA 
RL 



Son 



Son 
RL 



Son 



frowns and wrinkles strange 
'within the level of your frown 

Frown — now doth he frown 
When he did frown 
see thee frown on my defects 
But if Fortune once do frown 

Frown'st — On whom frown'st thou Son 

Frowning — frowning Fortune PP 
her frowning brows be bent " 

Frozen — What wax so frozen 
'Tween frozen conscience 

Frnit — doting father of his fruit 
and unfather'd fruit 

Fruitful— Won in the fields of fruit- 
ful Italy R L 

Fruitless — despite of .... chastity VA 

Fry — the ungrown fry forbears " 

Fuel — with self-substantial fuel 

Fulfil — how canst thou fulfil 
where you did fulfil 
My love-suit, sweet, fulfil 
' Will ' will fulfil the treasure " 

Fulfilled — that they are so fulfilled R L 

Full — gardens full of flowers V A 

Broad breast, full eye " 

breeder, full of fear " 

Full gently now she takes him " 
eye so full hath fed " 

Whose full perfection " 

Lust full of forged lies " 

My face is full of shame " 

Full of respects " 

as one full of despair " 

thou art so full of fear- " 

false and full of fraud " 

and too full of riot " 

Full of foul hope and full of fond 

mistrust R L 

gives the watch-word to his hand 

full soon 
His face, though full of cares 
Full many a glorious morning 
thy years full well befits 
have full as deep a dye 
winter, which being full of care 
Sometime all fall with feasting 
Was it the proud full sail 
My most full flame 
To give full growth 
Even so, being full 
Full character'd with lasting 

memory 
murderous, bloody, full of blame 
Nor that full star 
Ay, fill it full with wills 
espied a fickle maid full pale L C 

Youth is full of pleasance, age is 

full of care P P 

Youth is full of sport " 

heard it said full oft " 

Full-fed— Look, as the .... hound R L 



25 8 

93 8 

117 11 

45 

571 

49 2 

21 47 

149 6 

18 15 

19 13 

565 

247 

1064 

97 10 

107 

751 

526 

1 6 

628 

1635 

136 4 

136 5 

1258 

..... 65 

296 

320 

361 

399 

634 

804 



Son 



33 

41 
54 
56 
75 
86 
115 
115 
118 



911 
955 
1021 
1141 
1147 

284 

870 

1503 

1 

3 

5 

13 
9 
1 
4 

14 
5 



122 2 

129 3 

132 7 

136 6 
5 

12 2 

12 5 

19 41 

694 



FULLNESS 



108 



GAZER 



Fullness— even till they wink with 

fullness Son 56 6 

Fume — bites the poor flies in his .... F^ 316 

which from discharged cannon 

fumes BL 1043 

Function — Doth part his function Son 113 3 

Furnace — As from a furnace V A 274 

thou furnace of foul-reeking 

smoke B L 799 

Furrow — time's furrows I behold Son 22 3 

Further — now she will no further V A 905 

doth force a further strife B L 689 

For further I could say L C 169 

Fury — his fury was assuaged V A 318 

With blindfold fury " 554 

the headlong fury of his speed B L 501 

with the wind in greater fury fret " 648 

Spend'st thou thy fury Son 100 3 

Gage — or all for one we gage BL 144 

but laid no words to gage " 1351 

Gain — Despair to gain doth traflic " 131 

are with gain so fond " 134 

bankrupt in this poor-rich gain " 140 

A captive victor that hath lost in 

gain . " 730 

Having no other pleasure of his 

gain " 860 

my loss is my love's gain Son 42 9 

lives upon his gains " 67 12 

thus far I count my gain " 141 13 

to turn them both to gain P P 16 10 

Gain — if I gain the thing I seek R L 211 

I have seen the hungry ocean gain (Sjji 64 5 

And gain by ill thrice more " 119 14 

it was to gain my grace L C 79 

Gain'd — Thy grace being gain'd "38 

Gainer — I by this will be a gainer too Son 88 9 

Gaining' — doth traffic oft for gaining iJ i 131 

Or, gaining more " 138 

'Gainst — 'Gainst venom'd sores V A 916 

dotes on what he looks 'gainst 

law or duty R L 497 

That 'gainst thyself Son 10 6 
nothing 'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13 
And 'gainst myself " 35 11 
'Gainst death and all oblivious en- 
mity " 55 9 
Crooked eclipses 'gainst his glory " 60 7 
'gainst my strong infection " 111 10 

'gainst her own content L C 157 

'gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 'gainst 

shame " 271 

the battery that you make 'gainst 

mine " 277 

'Gainst whom the world P P 3 2 

Gait— comforter, with weary gait V A 529 

with slow-sad gait descended B L 1081 

An humble gait, calm looks " 1508 

fingers walk with gentle gait Son 128 11 

Gall— Thy honey turns to gall B L 889 

water-galls in her dim element " 1588 

Fraughted with gall PP 18 26 

Gallant— or kill the gallant knight " 16 6 

Galled— To break upon the galled 

shore B L 1440 

'Gan—' 0, pity ,"gan she cry V A .^.. 95 

with swelling drops 'gan wet B L 1228 

and often 'gan to tear L C 51 



'Gan — Till thus he 'gan besiege me L C 177 

All unseen 'gan passage find P P 17 6 

Gaol — in a gaol of snow VA 362 

use rigour in my gaol Soyi 133 12 

Gapiug — a press of gaping faces B L 1408 

Garden — gardens full of-flowers V A 65 

And many maiden gardens Son 16 6 

Garment — Who wears a garment V A 415 

Some in their garments Son 91 3 
prouder than garments cost " 91 10 
with the garment of a grace L C 316 

Gash — That makes more gashes VA 1066 

Gate — it will not ope the gate " 424 

But through the flood-gates " 959 

Soft pity enters at an iron gate B L 595 

but stol'n from forth thy gate " 1068 

Sings hymns at heaven's gate Son 29 12 
Nor gates of steel so strong " 65 8 
Who glazed with crystal gate L C 286 

Gather'd — flowers that are not .... VA 131 

Or flowers with flowers gather'd Son 124 4 

Gaudy — The gaudy sun would peep VA 1088 

his gaudy banner is display'd B L 272 

herald to the gaudy spring Son 1 10 

Gave — crystal tears gave light V A 491 

O, had she then gave over " 571 

The kiss I gave you " 771 

entertainment that he gave " 1108 

virtue gave the golden age B L 60 

fountain that gave drink " 577 

by him that gave it thee " 624 

art gave lifeless life " 1374 

no guilty instance gave " 1511 

whom she best endow'd she gave 

the more Son 11 11 

thy sour leisure gave sweet leave " 39 10 
And Time that gave doth now " 60 8 

gave my heart another youth " 110 7 

gave eyes to blindness " 152 11 

sigh'd, tore, and gave the flood L C 44 

habitude gave life and grace " 114 

and gave him all my flower " 147 

to the stream gave grace " 285 

gave the tempter place " 318 

Gavest — the hours thou gavest me 

to repose B L 933 

Thou gavest me thine Son 22 14 

Thyself thou gavest " 87 9 

me, to whom thou gavest it " 87 10 

Gay — caparisons or trapping gay V A 286 

dead fleece made another gay Son 68 8 

thy outward walls so costly gay " 146 4 
the learned man hath got the lady 
gay PP 16 15 

Gaze — eyes pay tributary gazes V A 632 

an eye to gaze on beauty B L 496 

deer, that stands at gaze " 1149 

The lovely gaze where every eye Son 5 2 
to gaze therein on thee " 24 12 

anon'their gazes lend L C 26 

mine eyes throw gazes to the east P P 15 1 

Gazed — they long have gazed VA 927 

gazed for tidings in my eager eyesP L 254 

gazed upon with every eye " 1015 

wistly on him gazed " 1355 

on him she gazed, and gazing still " 1531 

livery so gazed on now Son 2 3 

Gazer— That the star-gazers VA 509 

gazer late did wonder . " 748 



GAZER 



109 



GIVE 



Gazer — How many gazers mightst 

thou lead Son 96 11 

Gazetli — Now gazeth she on him VA 22-1 

gazeth on her yet unstained bed It L 366 

object whereupon it gazeth Son 20 6 

Gazing — . . . . upon a late-embarked V A 818 

wonder of still-gazing e}'es R L 84 

rage of lust by gazing qualified " 424 

Gaziug upon the Greeks " 1384 

on him she gazed, and gazing still " 1531 

in their gazing spent Scm 125 8 
Geiii — with earth and sea's rich gems " 21 6 

■ AVith annexions of rich gems L C 208 

Gender— That thy sable makest P T 18 

General — to the general doom It L 924 

a private sin in general " 1484 

I better in ose general best Son 91 8 

this general evil they maintain " 121 13 

the general of hot desire " 154 7 

did in the general bosom reign L C 127 

Gentle — whose gentle wind VA 189 

With gentle majesty " 278 

thy courser, gentle boy " 403 

Distempering gentle Love " 653 

Love's gentle spring " 801 

Lo, here the gentle lark " 853 

it is no gentle chase " 883 

Then, gentle shadow " 1001 

beast that knows no gentle right B L 545 

some gentle gust doth get " 549 

folly lurk in gentle breasts " 851 

roll forward like a gentle flood " 1118 

let beasts bear gentle minds " 1148 

Their gentle sex to weep " 1237 

Know, gentle wench " 1273 

with gentle work did frame Son 5 1 

fairer lodged than gentle love " 10 10 

A woman's gentle heart " 20 3 

thy robbery, gentle thief " 40 9 

Gentle thou art, and therefore " 41 5 

Within the gentle closure " 48 11 

• had all thy gentle grace " 79 2 

shall be my gentle verse " 81 9 

youth and gentle sport " 96 2 

In gentle numbers " 100 6 

fingers walk with gentle gait " 128 11 

• used in giving gentle doom " 145 7 

that follow'd it as gentle day " 145 10 

Then, gentle cheater " 151 3 

he 'gan besiege me : "Gentle maid L C 177 

jest at every gentle offer P P 4 12 

Gentlest — the rudest or sight Son 113 9 

Gently— Full gently now VA 361 

and gently hear him " 1096 

when thou gently sway'st Son 128 3 

Gentry — By knighthood, gentry R L 569 

Get — help she cannot get V A 93 

to get it is thy duty " 168 

how to get my palfrey " 384 

Or sells eternity to get a toy R L 214 

some gentle gust doth get " 549 

where he the lamb may get " 878 

Go, get me hither paper " 1289 

unless thou get a son Son 7 14 

that did his picture get L C 134 

Ghastly— beheld some sprite R L 451 

Let ghastly shadows " 971 

a jewel hung in ghastly night Son 27 11 

Ghost— Grim-grinning ghost VA 933 



Ghost— ^that affable familiar ghost Son 86 9 

Giddy — and turn the giddy round R L 952 

Gift— Which bounteous gift Son 11 12 

doth now his gift confound " 60 8 

The cause of this fair gift " 87 7 

So thy great gift " 87 11 

and your gifts to tell " 103 12 

Thy gift, thy tables " 122 1 

Which by a gift of learning P P 16 14 

Gild— the golden age to gild R L 60 

Gilded — nor the gilded monuments Son 55 1 

And gilded honour shamefully " 66 5 

much outlive a gilded tomb " 101 11 

were gilded in his sjuiling L C 172 

Gild'st- thou gild'st the even Son 28 12 

Gilding-Gilding the object " 20 6 

Gilding pale streams " 33 4 

Gills— their golden gills VA 1100 

'Gin — suitor 'gins to woo him " 6 

And 'gins to chide " 46 

when first it 'gins to bud P P 13 3 

Girded — all girded up in sheaves Son 12 7 

Girdle — with embracing flames R L 6 

Girl— ' My girl,' quoth she " 1270 

But tell me, girl, when went " 1275 

Girth — now his woven girths VA 266 

Give — So offers he to give " 88 

Give me one kiss, I'll give " 209 

' Give me my hand,' saith he " 373 

' Give me my heart,' saith she " 374 

O, give it me " 375 

Gives false alarms " 651 

gives a deadly groan " 1044 

she securely gives good cheer R L 89 

And give the sneaped birds " 333 

Which gives the watch-word " 370 

Gives the hot charge " 434 

but he that gives them knows " 833 

Give physic to the sick " 901 

but sin ne'er gives a fee " 913 

disdained scraps to give " 987 

at least I give " 1053 

she doth give demure good-morrow " 1219 

To give her so much grief " 1463 

And friend to friend gives " 1488 

and give the harmless show " 1507 

smilingly with this gives o'er " 1567 

that we may give redress " 1603 

she gives her sorrow fire " 1604 

can give the fault amending " 1614 

to give this wound to me " 1722 

give his sorrow place " 1773 

and busy winds give o'er " 1790 

I did give that life " 1800 

to give thyself a blow " 1823 

plausibly did give consent " 1854 

Nature's bequest gives nothing Son 4 3 

largess given thee to give "46 
your sweet semblance to some 

other give " 13 4 

To give away yourself " 16 13 

this gives life to thee " 18 14 

not to give back again " 22 14 

of me to thee did give " 31 11 

give physic to my grief " 84 9 
the shadow doth such substance 

give " 37 10 

0, give thyself the thanks " 38 5 

dost give invention " 38 8 



GIVE 



110 



GO 



Give — by this separation I may give Son 39 7 

and give him leave " 51 14 

worthiness gives scope " 52 13 

■which truth doth give " 54 2 

give thee that due " 69 3 

give thee so tliine own " 69 6 

give warning to the world " 71 3 

will give thee memory " 77 6 

doth give another place " 79 4 

beauty doth he give " 79 10 

others would give life " 83 12 
charter of thy worth gives thee 

releasing " 87 3 

Give not a windy night " 90 7 

which gives thee all " 100 2 

And gives thy pen " 100 8 

Give my love fame " 100 13 

Nor gives to necessary wrinkles " 108 11 

Then give me welcome " 110 13 

To give full growth " 115 14 

Give salutation to my sportive blood " 121 6 

Therefore to give them " 122 11 

Give them thy fingers " 128 14 

it gives my friend and me " 133 2 

give the lie to my true sight " 150 3 

Nor gives it satisfaction L C 162 

Given — ^largess given thee to give Son 4 6 

have given admiring praise " 59 14 

And given grace a double majesty " 78 8 

And given to time " 117 6 

Givest — With the breath thou givest 

and takest P T 19 

Giving — shall claim excuse's giving Ji L 1715 

Giving him aid, my verse Son 86 8 

in giving gentle doom " 145 7 

consecrations giving place L C 263 

Glad — Make glad and sorry seasons Son 19 5 

but then no longer glad " 45 13 

Gladly — which thou receivest not 

gladly "83 

Glance— But the mild glance B L 1399 

do I not glance aside Son 76 3 

forbear to glance thine eye aside " 139 6 

Glass — like pearls in glass V A 980 

Two glasses, where herself '' 1129 

For princes are the glass B L 615 

Wilt thou be glass " 619 

AVhen their glass fell " 152G 

Poor broken glass " 1758 

all the beauty of my glass " 1763 

Look in thy glass Son 3 1 
Thou art thy mother's glass ."39 

pent in walls of glass " 5 10 

My glass shall not persuade me " 22 1 

my glass shows me myself " 62 9 

Thy glass will show thee " 77 1 

which thy glass will truly show " 77 5 

Look in yonr glass " 103 6 

Your own glass shows you " 103 14 

Dost hold Time's fickle glass " 126 2 
Brighter than glass, and yet, as 

glass is, brittle P P 1 3 

A brittle glass " 13 4 

a gloss, a glass, a flower " 13 5 

As broken glass " 13 10 

Glassy — Writ in the glassy margents 

of such books BL 102 

Glazed — glazed with thine eyes Son 24 8 

Who glazed with crystal gate L C 286 



Gleain'd — gleam'd forth their ashy 

lights B L 1378 

Glide— So glides he in the night VA 816 

Glister — scornfully glisters like fire " 275 

Glittering — their .... golden towers BL 945 

Globe— ivory globes circled with blue " 407 

Gloomy — possession of thy .... place " 803 

Glorify — bright sun glorifies the sky F.4 485 

Glorious — glorious by his manly 

chivalry B L 109 

kings glorious day " 1013 

Full many a glorious morning Son 33 1 
look'd on the world with glorious 
eye PP 6 11 

Gloriously — so gloriously behold V A 857 

his triumph and his glories " 1014 

Glory — Time's glory is to calm ^ B L 939 

burnt the shining glory " 1523 

they in their glory die Son 25 8 

a part of all thy glory live " 37 12 

'gainst his glory fight " 60 7 

shall be most my glory " 83 10 

lends not some small glory " 84 6 

losing me shalt win much glory " 88 8 
Doth half that glory " 132 8 

Glory — Some glory in their birth " 91 1 

Gloss — Gloss on the rose V A 936 

A shining gloss that vadeth P P 13 2 

a gloss, a glass, a flower " 13 5 

As vaded gloss no rubbing " 13 8 

Glove — Lucretia's glove, wherein B L 317 

This glove to wanton tricks " 320 

The doors, the wind, the glove " 325 

Glow — and begins to glow VA 337 

which in his liver glows BL 47 

Glow'd — which in his cheek so ... . L C 324 

Glowing — coals of glowing fire V A 35 

see'st the glowing of such fire Son 73 9 

vrifh crystal gate the glowing roses L O 285 

Glow-worm — His eyes, like glow- 
worms VA 621 

Glued — Their lips together glued " 546 

Glutton — when his glutton eye " 399 

Lust like a glutton dies " 803 

or else this glutton be Son 1 13 

Gluttoning— Or gluttoning on all " 75 14 

Glutton-like — And she feeds VA 548 

Gnat — Gnats are unnoted B L 1014 

Go— to her straight goes he VA 264 

His testy master goeth about " 319 

let go, and let me go " 379 

you crush me ; let me go " 611 

where'er he goes " 622 

through the which he goes " 683 

bleeding as they go " 924 

with swift intent he goes B L 46 

that would let him go " 76 

yet ere he go to bed " 776 

to mark how slow time goes " 990 

Go, get me hither paper " 1289 

which shall go before " 1302 

with his own weight goes " 1494 

with the blunt swains he goes " 1504 

a watery rigol goes " 1745 

among the wastes of time must go Son 12 10 
if it shall go well " 14 7 

I'll run and give him leave to go " 51 14 
with that which goes before " 60 3 

over-goes my blunt invention " 103 7 



GO 



111 



GORGE 



Go — -which governs me to go about Son 113 2 

I never saw a goddess go " 130 11 

thy proud heart go wide " 140 14 

and had let go by L C 59 

'Mongst our mourners shalt thou 

go P T 20 

God — direful god of war VA 98 

' foil'd the god of fight " 114 

thou clear god " 860 

be my gods, my guide iJ L 351 

thou art a god, a king " 601 

For kings, like gods " 602 

God wot, it was defect " 1345 

The painter was no god " 1461 

To rouse our Roman gods " 1831 

That god forbid that made me first 

your slave Son 58 1 

A god in love " 110 12 

The little Love-god lying " 154 1 

One god is god of both P P 8 13 

how god Mars did try her " 11 3 

the warlike god embraced me " 11 5 

the warlike god unlaced me " 11 7 
All my lady's love is lost, God wot " 18 10 

Goddess — to do a goddess good VA 28 

The guilty goddess of my harmful Son 111 2 

1 never saw a goddess go " 130 11 
Thou being a goddess P P 3 6 

Goest — As thou goest onwards Son 126 6 

Goeth— goeth about to take him VA 319 

Going— going I shall fall " 719 

thyself, out-going in thy noon Son 7 13 

Since from thee going " 51 13 
Gold — gold that's put to use more 

gold begets VA 768 

hills seem burnish'd gold " 858 

that coffers up his gold P L 855 

Basely with gold " 1068 

is his gold complexion dimm'd Son 18 6 

As those gold candles " 21 12 

of posied gold and bone L O 45 

Golden — sighs and golden hairs VA 51 

Love's golden arrow " 947 

their golden gills " 1100 

Against the golden splendour B L 25 

That golden hap " 42 

the golden age to gild " 60 

an eye-sore in my golden coat " 205 

Her hair, like golden threads " 400 

clouds about his golden head " 777 

their glittering golden towers " 945 

of Nestor's golden words " 1420 

this thy golden time Son 3 12 

on his golden pilgrimage "78 

kissing with golden face " 83 3 

the golden tresses of the dead " 68 5 

with golden quill " 85 3 

The golden bullet beats it down P P 19 30 

Gone — or prey be gone VA 58 

makest thou to be gone " 188 

he struggles to be gone " 227 

my horse is gone " 380 

though thy horse be gone " 390 

told and quickly gone " 520 

The sheep are gone to fold " 532 

Thou hadst been gone " 613 

my salt tears gone " 1071 

blow it off, and being gone " 1089 

0, that is gone for which R L 1051 



Gone — was Tarquin gone away R L 1281 

Her maid is gone " 1296 

the duteous vassal scarce is gone " 1360 

nature calls thee to be gone Son 4 11 

and lusty leaves quite gone "57 

trophies of my lovers gone " 31 10 

miles when thou art gone " 44 10 
these quicker elements are gone " 45 5 

from these would I be gone " 66 13 

after I am gone " 71 14 

Though I, once gone " 81 6 

I have gone here and there " 110 1 

gone to the hedge for shade P P 6 2 

Good— to do a goddess good V A 28 

she for this good turn " 92 

by her good will " 479 

and use good dealing " 514 

good queen, it will not be • " 607 

but know, it is as good " 1181 

she securely gives good cheer R L 89 

And with good thoughts " 248 

done to a great good end " 528 

petty ills shall change thy good " 656 

Let my good name " 820 

We have no good that we can say 

is ours " 873 

both to good and bad " 995 

indeed to do me good " 1028 

that would do it good " 1117 

mine own would do me good " 1274 

This is too curious-good " 1300 

of good or evil luck Son 14 3 

Now see what good turns " 24 9 

some good conceit of thine " 26 7 

mine is thy good report " 36 14 

And each doth good turns " 47 2 
captive good attending captain ill " 65 12 

So thou be good " 70 5 
I think good thoughts, whilst 

other write good words " 85 5 

mine is thy good report " 96 14 

all thy sum of good " 109 12 
o'er-green my bad, my good allow " 112 4 

count bad what I think good " 121 8 

Yet, in good faith " 131 5 

fire my good one out " 144 14 

the sweets that seem so good L C 164 

fire my good one out P P 2 14 

with more than love's good will "97 

a vain and doubtful good " 13 1 

a doubtful good, a gloss " 13 5 

And as goods lost " 13 7 

Good night, good rest " 14 1 

She bade good night " 14 2 

good day, of night now borrow " 15 17 

Goodly— like a goodly champaign RL 1247 

and of goodly pride Son 80 12 

The goodly objects L C 137 

Good-morrow— with this fair .... VA 859 

give demure good-morrow ' R L 1219 

Goodness— Which, rank of goodness (Sbra 118 12 

Which die for goodness " 124 14 

Good-night— and bid good-night V A 534 

Now let me say ' Good-night " 535 

'Good-night,' quoth she " 537 

Gore— a churlish swine to gore " 616 

all stain'd with gore " 664 

Gored— Gored mine own thoughts Son 110 3 

Gorge — Till either gorge be stuff'd V A 58 



GORGED 



112 



GREEK 



Gorged— full-fedhound or liawkiJi 694 

Got — every alien pen hath got my use /SoM 78 3 

a mansion have those vices got " 95 9 

Where Cupid got new fire " 153 14 

the learned man hath got the lady 

gay PP 16 15 

Gout — cramps and gouts and painful 

fits R L 856 

Gouty— Than the true landlord L C 140 

Govern — should govern every thing E L 602 

governs me to go about Son 113 2 

Govern'd — govern'd him in strength V A 42 

Governess — Where their dear ... . RL 443 

Government — regard and smiling 

government " 1400 

Grace — heavenly moisture, air of 

grace V A 64 

to her oratory adds more grace R L 564 

Desire doth fight with grace " 712 

In great commanders grace and 

majesty " 1387 

but with several graces " 1410 

number all your graces Son 17 6 

And dost him grace " 28 10 

Lascivious grace, in whom " 40 13 

In all external grace " 53 13 

given grace a double majesty " 78 8 

with thy sweet graces graced be " 78 12 

had all thy gentle grace " 79 2 

do inherit heaven's graces " 94 5 

thy grace is youth " 96 2 

Both grace and faults " 96 3 

Thou makest faults graces " 96 4 

Than of your graces and your gifts " 103 12 

it was to gain my grace L C 79 

gave life and grace . " 114 

Pieced not his grace " 119 

disciplined, ay, dieted in grace " 261 

to the stream gave grace " 285 

with the garment of a Grace " 316 

Thy grace being gain'd P P 3 8 

Grace in all simplicity P T 54 

Grace — and tears may grace the 

fashion R L 1319 

eyes this cunning want to grace 

their art Son 24 13 

with his presence grace impiety " 67 2 

since mourning doth thee grace " 132 11 

doth not grace the day " 150 4 

with damask dye to grace her P P 7 5 

Graced — with thy sweet graces. .. .be S)» 78 12 

but were all graced by him L C 119 

Graceless — Thus graceless holds he R L 246 

Gracious — when the gracious light Son 7 1 

gracious and kind " 10 11 

no face so gracious is as mine " 62 5 

my gracious numbers are decay'd " 79 3 

in others seem right gracious " 135 7 

Graciously — Points on me graciously " 26 10 

Graff— This bastard graff R L 1062 

Grained — upon his grained bat L C 64 

Grant — As well to hear as grant R L 915 

Grant, if thou wilt Son 10 3 

I grant, sweet love " 79 5 

I grant thou wert not married " 82 1 

I grant I never saw " 130 11 

Granted — ere he desire, have .... L C 131 

Grant'st — Thou grant'st no time R L 908 

Granteth — but his heart granteth " 558 



Granting — hold the^ but by thy Son 87 5 

Grape — deceived with painted ... . VA 601 

For one sweet grape R L 215 

Grass — Sweet bottom-grass VA 236 

For on the grass " 473 

The grass stoops not " 1028 

no grass, herb, leaf or weed " 1055 

an April daisy on the grass R L 395 

Grate — The threshold grates the door " 306 

Gratis — He gratis comes " 914 

Grave — but a swallowing grave V A 757 

king of graves, and grave for kings " 995 

still looketh for a grave " 1106 

to my household's grave R L 193 

and they thy fouler grave " 661 

by the grave and thee Son 1 14 

Thou art the grave " 31 9 

Of mouthed graves " 77 6 

can yield me but a common grave " 81 7 

Grave— cs.n never grave it V A 376 

And grave, like water, that doth 

eat in steel R L 755 

you see grave Nestor stand " 1401 

Graven — If Time have any wrinkle 

graven there Son 100 10 

Gravity — reasons find of settled . . . . " 49 8 

Graze — Graze on my lips V A 233 

Grazed — that grazed his cattle nigh L C 57 

Great — Or what great danger V A 206 

either being so great R L 69 

And when great treasure " 132 

The guilt being great " 229 

to a great good end " 528 

thy guilt is great " 876 

great strifes to end " 899 

Great grief grieves most " 1117 

In great commanders " 1387 

so great a sum of sums Son 4 8 

Great princes' favourites " 25 5 

Duty so great, which wit " 26 5 

though much is not so great " 61 9 

full sail of his great verse " 86 1 

So thy great gift " 87 11 

And my great mind " 114 10 

your great deserts repay " 117 2 

great bases for eternity " 125 3 

In things of great receipt " 136 7 

Then must the love be great P P 8 3 

That to hear it was great pity " 21 12 

Then farewell his great renown " 21 48 

Greater — deserved a greater fee V A 609 

blinded with a greater light R L 375 

Unto a greater uproar " 427 

in greater fury fret " 648 

should not the greater hide " 663 

perplex'd in greater pain " 733 

with greater patience bear it " 1158 

till meeting greater ranks " 1441 

it is a greater grief Son 40 11 

Thy worth the greater " 70 6 

more strong, far greater " 119 12 

Greatest — For greatest scandal waits 

on greatest state R L 1006 

now my greatest grief Son 48 

Grecian — And you in ... . tires are " 53 8 

Greece — is drawn the power of ... . R L 1368 

Greedy — Rolling his greedy eyeballs " 368 

'Greeing — what with his gust is ... . Son ll'k 11 
Greek— Gazing upon the Greeks R L 1384 



GREEK 



113 



GROSSLY 



Greek — encouraging the Greeks to 

flght B L 1402 

Of all the Greeks " 1470 

Green — trip upon the green VA 146 

the green sticks fast " 527 

the orator too green " 806 

On the green coverlet R L 394 

And summer's green all girded Son 12 7 
with golden face the meadows green " 33 3 
and he in them still green " 63 14 

summer of another's green " 68 11 

which yet are green " 104 8 

The deep-green emerald L C 213 

lovely, fresh, and green PP 4 2 

on the brook's green brim " 6 10 

Like a green plum " 10 5 

Green plants bring not " IS 39 

Green - dropping — Green -dropping 

sap, which she comjjares to tears F^ 1176 

Greet — wordless, so greets heaven Ji L 112 

And scarcely greet me Son 49 6 

to greet it with my lays " 102 6 

thus anew to greet " 145 8 

Greetetli— wife that greeteth thee P L 1303 

Grew — Grew kinder, and his fury V A 318 

Grew I not faint " 645 

where your equal grew Son 84 4 
the womb wherein they grew " 86 4 
pluck them where they grew " 98 8 
grew to faults assured " 118 10 
And grew a seething bath " 153 7 
in others' orchards grew L C 171 

Grey — Mine eyes are grey, and bright F,4 140 

the grey cheeks of the east Son 132 6 

Grief— make them droop with grief V A 61)6 

And now his grief " 701 

grief and damn'd despair " 743 

best become her grief " 968 

Grief hath two tongues " 1007 

express my grief " 1069 

For every little grief " 1179 

and such griefs sustain R L 139 

Frantic with grief " 762 

my grief with groans " 797 

turns to gall, thy joy to grief " 889 

True grief is fond " 1094 

Sometime her grief is dumb " 1105 

Grief best is pleased with grief's 

society " 1111 

Great grief grieves most " 1117 

Grief dallied with, nor law nor 

limit knows " 1120 

for grief 01 my sustaining " 1272 

Conceit and grief " 1298 

from our house in grief " 1308 

Her grief, but not her grief's true 

quality " 1313 

much grief and not a tongue " 1463 

As if with grief or travail he had 

fainted " 1543 

feeling of her own grief " 1578 

And tell thy grief " 1603 

The grief away that stops his an- 
swer " 1664 

To push grief on, and back the 

same grief draw " 1673 

or grief help grievous deeds " 1822 

night doth nightly make grief's 
strength seem stronger Son 28 14 

8 



Grief— give physic to my grief Son 34 9 

it is a greater grief " 40 11 

it is not all my grief " 42 1 

now my greatest grief " 48 6 

My grief lies onward " 50 14 

When other petty griefs " 90 10 

Of grief and blushes L C 200 

For her griefs so lively shown P P 21 17 
Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55 
Grievance — grieve at grievances for- 
gone Son 30 9 

Her grievance with his hearing L C 67 

Grieve — Thy coward heart with false 

bethinking grieves VA 1024 

Great grief grieves most at that 

would do it good R L 1117 

grieve at grievances forgone Son 30 9 

Grieved — No more be grieved at " 35 1 
Grieving — Grieving themselves to 

guess at others' smarts P L 1238 

Grievous — or grief help .... deeds " 1822 

Grim— mourner, black and grim VA 920 

grim and urchin-snouted boar " 1105 

As the grim lion fawneth R L 421 

Whose grim aspect " 451 

Grim cave of death " 769 

and grim care's reign " 1451 

Grim-grinning — ghost VA 933 

Grin — Or as the wolf doth grin " 459 

Grind — I never more will grind Son 110 10 

Grinning — grim-grinning ghost VA 933 

Gripe — hind under the gripe's sharp 

claws P L 543 

Griped — Griped in an armed hand " 1425 

Griping — and griping it, the needle " 319 

Grisly — carrier of grisly care " 926 

Groan — Then love's deep groans VA 377 

heavy groan advantage thee " ..... 950 

gives a deadly groan " 1044 

nor mother's groans respecting P L 431 

my tears, my sighs, my groans " 588 

my grief with groans " 797 

in his bed with bedrid groans " 975 

And with deep groans " 1132 

Till after a deep groan " 1276 

When sighs and groans " 1319 

he answers with a groan Son 50 11 

For that same groan " 50 13 

A thousand groans " 131 10 

with bleeding groans they pine L C 275 

Groan — my heart longs not to groan K^4 785 

her heart, whereat it groans " 829 

to sigh, to weep, and groan R L 1362 

power to make love groan Son 131 6 

that makes my heart to groan " 133 1 

Groin — the tusk in his soft groin VA 1116 

Groom— bed of some rascal groom P L 671 

Poor grooms are sightless night " 1013 

charging the sour-faced groom " 1334 

When, silly groom ! God wot " 1345 

For some hard-favour'd groom " 1632 

death of Lucrece and her groom " 1645 

Gross — Not gross to sink V A 150 

hold it her own gross abuse P L 1315 

Though my gross blood " «... 1655 

And their gross painting Son 82 13 

to my gross body's treason " 151 6 
Grossly — Grossly engirt with daring 

infamy P L 1173 



GROSSLY 



114 



HAD 



Grossly — thou hast too grossly dyed /Sbre 99 5 

Ground — What see'st thou in the 

ground VA 118 

now on the ground " 224 

to the ground below " 923 

of the sluttish ground " 983 

imprison'd in the ground " 1046 

on the ground lay spill'd " 1167 

My sable ground of sin H L 1074 

to the skies and ground " 1199 

Then jointly to the ground " 1846 

showers are to the ground S(m 75 2 

treads on the ground " 130 12 

valley-fountain of that ground " 153 4 

In brief the grounds and motives L C 68 

he should not pass those grounds P P 9 8 

lie wither'd on the ground " 13 9 

Through heartless ground " 18 35 

Grounded — . ... on sinful loving &on 142 2 

It is so grounded inward " 62 4 

Grove — hasteth to a myrtle grove V A 865 

Make thy sad grove R L 1129 

in men, as in a rough-grown grove " 1249 

Which a grove of myrtles made P P 21 4 

Grow — spring doth yearly grow VA 141 

face grows to face " 540 

To grow unto himself " 1180 

still blasts, and ne'er grows old R L 49 

so their pride doth grow " 298 

as they see others grow Son 12 12 

consider every thing that grows " 15 1 

and straight grow sad " 45 14 

that thou dost common grow " 69 14 

what worth in you doth grow " 83 8 

doth thy beauty grow " 93 13 

to that which still doth grow " 115 14 

Grows fairer than at first " 119 12 

That it nor grows with heat " 124 12 

black wires grow on her head " 130 4 

I should grow mad " 140 9 

that, when it grows " 142 11 

Trees did grow and plants P P 21 6 

Saw division grow together P T 42 

Grow'st — so fast thou grow'st Son 11 1 

to time thou grow'st " 18 12 

as thy sweet self grow'st " 126 4 

Growing — Things .... to themselves V A 166 

the growing rose defends R L 492 

grown with this growing age Son 32 10 

upon misprision growing " 87 11 

Growing a bath and healthful " 154 11 

an osier growing by a brook P P 6 5 

Grown — as in a rough-grown grove R L 1249 

grown with this growing age Son 32 10 

And sweets grown common " 102 12 

Who hast by waning grown " 126 8 

world is grown so bad " 140 11 

Growth — are growth's abuse VA 166 

shall never come to growth R L 1062 

in pride of all his growth Son 99 12 

in growth of riper days " 102 8 

To give full growth to that " 115 14 

Guard — thy sword to iniquity R L 626 

To guard the lawful reasons Son 49 12 

let my heart be his guard " 133 11 

Shook oif my sober guards L C 298 

Guarded — the honey guarded with 

a sting R L 493 

Guess — to guess at others' smart " 1238 



Guess — And that, in guess, thy mea- 
sure Son 69 10 
I guess one angel " 144 12 
I guess one angel P P 2 12 

Guest — that sour, unwelcome guest V A 449 

welcome to her princely guest R L 90 

brooks not merry guests " 1125 

to that unhappy guest " 1565 

mine eye is my heart's guest Son 47 7 

a sad distemper'd guest " 153 12 

Guide — had his team to guide V A 179 

Fortune be my gods, my guide R L 351 

That guides this hand " 1722 

star that guides my moving Son 26 9 

Guile — that so much guile R L 1534 

The wiles and guiles that women 
work PP 19 37 

Guilt— The guilt being great R L 229 

This guilt would seem " 635 

For they their guilt with weeping " 754 

O Opportunity, thy guilt is great " 876 

But they whose guilt " 1342 

Lest my bewailed guilt Son 36 10 

Guiltless — So .... she securely gives P L 89 

To burn the guiltless casket " 1057 

Let guiltless souls be freed " 1482 

Guilty — his guilty hand pluck'd up 

the latch " 858 

The guilty rebel for remission " 714 

the burthen of a guilty mind " 735 

sweating with guilty fear " 740 

Since thou art guilty ■' 772 

guilty of thy honour's wrack " 841 

Guilty thou art of murder " 918 

Guilty of perjury and subornation " 919 

Guilty of treason " 920 

Guilty of incest " 921 

Be guilty of my death " 931 

Let guiltless souls be freed from 

guilty woes " 1482 

no guilty instance gave " 1511 

The guilty goddess of my harmful Son 111 2 
. Lest guilt)'^ of my faults " 151 4 

Guise — this was thy father's guise V A 1177 

Gulf— A swallowing gulf R L 557 

Gull— Which nightly gulls him Son 86 10 

Gun — deadly bullet of a gun VA 461 

Gush— Shall gush pure streams R L 1078 

Gust — Gusts and foul flaws V A 456 

some gentle gust doth get RL 549 

Against the stormy gusts Son 13 11 

what with his gust is 'greeing " 114 11 

Gyves— sports in unconstrained . ... L C 242 

Habit — throws that shallow . . . by P i 1814 

O love's best habit Son 138 11 

love's best habit PP 1 11 

Habitation— Which for their Son 95 10 

Habitude — gave life and grace L C 114 

Had — Had ta'en his last leave V A 2 

the shadow had forsook " 176 

Adonis had his team to guide " 179 

O, had thy mother borne " 203 

She had not brought " 204 

they had not seen " 357 

had his acts made plain " 359 

or I had no hearing " 428 

1 had my load before " 430 

Had I no eyes " 433 



HAD 



115 



HAND 



Had— Had not his clouded with his 

brow's VA 490 

no more had seen " 504 

O, had she then gave over " 571 

she had not suck'd " 572 

then he had spoke " 943 

, had lost his power " 944 

that the boar had trench'd " 1052 

If he had spoke " 1097 

Had I been tooth'd " 1117 

the heavens had him lent iJ Z 17 

sleep had closed up mortal eyes " 163 

their father had not bin " 210 

Had Collatinus kill'd " 232 

had Narcissus seen her " 265 

Self-love had never drown'd him " 266 

had they in that darksome prison 

died " 379 

Then had they seen " 380 

had sheathed their light " 397 

For it had been dishonour " 844 

Philomel had ended " 1079 

when sadly she had laid " 1212 

had stain'd her stain'd excuse " 1316 

observance in this work was had " 1385 

the painter had anatomized " 1450 

those shrunk pipes had fed " 1455 

Had doting Priam check'd " 1490 

Troy had been bright " 1491 

with grief or travail he had fainted " 1543 

beauty had purloin'd his eyes " 1651 

When they had sworn " 1849 

You liad a father Son 13 14 

Had my friend's Muse grown " 32 10 

than this his love had brought " 32 11 

Being had, to triumph " 52 14 

to show what wealth she had " 67 13 

Save what is had " 75 12 

had all thy gentle grace " 79 2 

Thus have I had thee " 87 13 

marjoram had stol'n thy hair " 99 7 

nor white, had stol'n of both " 99 10 

robbery had annex'd thy breath " 99 11 

colour it had stol'n from thee " 99 15 

They had not skill enough " 106 12 

and no sooner had " 129 6 

Had, having, and in quest to have " 129 10 

legions of true hearts had warm'd " 154 6 

Time had not scythed L C 12 

on it had conceited characters " 16 

woe had pelleted in tears " 18 

schedules had she many a one " 43 

and had let go by " 59 

if I had self-applied " 76 

He had the dialect " 125 

My parts had power " 260 

Scarce had the sun dried up PPG 1 

that often there had been "68 

Ah, that I had my lady " 11 13 

Had women been so strong as men " 19 23 

you had not had it then " 19 24 

Had the essence but in one P T 26 

Hadi^t — O, would thou hadst not, or 

I had VA 428 

' Thou hadst been gone " 613 

Hadst thou but bid beware " 943 

more than thou hadst before Son 40 2 

before thou hadst this more " 40 4 

Hail— Could 'scape the hail L C 310 



Hair — sighs and golden hairs X'A 51 

with long dishevell'd hair " 147 

for thee of my hairs " 191 

Fanning the hairs " 306 

Her hair like golden threads R L 400 

time to tear his curled hail " 981 

in my dishevell'd hair " 1129 

had stol'n thy hair Son 99 7 

If hairs be wires " 130 4 

Her hair, nor loose, nor tied L C 29 

behold these talents of their hair " 204 

Hairless — upon his hairless face VA 487 

Hairy — with hairy bristles armed " 625 

Half— ere summer half be done " 802 

They that lose half PL 1158 

and shows not half your parts So7i 17. 4 

disgrace me half so ill " 89 5 

Doth half that glory "132 8 

Halloiv'd — I hallow'd thy fair name " 108 8 

Hallow'd with sighs L C 228 

Halt— The poor, lame, blind, halt P L 902 

and I straight wiU hait Son 89 3 

A cripple soon can find a halt P P 19 10 

Hiumner'd — antiquitiesof. ... steel P i 951 

brass or hammer'd steel Son 120 4 

Hand — her fair immortal hand VA 80 

My smooth moist hand, were it 

with thy hand felt " 143 

Can thy right hand " 158 

and then his hand " 223 

With one fair hand " 351 

Her other tender hand " 352 

her soft hand's print " 353 

takes him by the hand " 361 

' Give me my hand " 373 

You hurt my hand " 421 

Not thy soft hands " 633 

whose desperate hands " 765 

In hand with all things " 912 

She takes him by the hand " 1124 

Her joy with heaved-up hand PL Ill 

she took me kindly by the hand " 253 

And how her hand, in my hand 

being lock'd " 260 

his guilty hand pluck'd up the latch " 358 

give the watchword to his hand 

full soon " 370 

Her lily hand her rosy cheek lies 

under " 386 

Without the bed her other fair 

hand was " 393 

His eye commends the leading to 

his hand ' " 436 

His hand, as proud of such a 

dignity " 437 

as his hand did scale " 440 

His hand, that yet remains " 463 

that his hand shakes withal " 467 

my heaved-up hands appeal " 638 

Such wretched hands such wretch- 
ed blood should spill " 999 

Poor hand, why quiver'st thou " 1030 

Yield to my hand ; my hand shall 

conquer thee " 1210 

the other takes in hand " 1235 

such sober action with his hand " 1403 

Here one man's hand lean'd " 1415 

Griped in an armed hand " 1425 

A hand, a foot, a face " 1427 



HAND 



116 



HARSH-SOUNDING 



Hand— he takes her by the blood- 
less hand B L 1597 

That guides this hand " 1722 

This said, he struck his hand " 1842 

winter's ragged hand deface Son 6 1 

with Nature's own hand painted " 20 1 

shake hands to torture me " 28 6 

from hands of falsehood " 48 4 

my hand against mj'self uprear , " 49 11 
Or at your hand the account of 

hours to crave " 58 3 

despite his cruel hand " 60 14 

"With Time's injurious hand crush'd " 63 2 

by Time's fell hand defaced " 64 1 

Or what strong hand can hold " 65 11 

The hand that writ it " 71 6 

The lily I condemned for thy hand " 99 6 

beauty, like a dial-hand " 104 9 

Of hand, of foot, of lip " 106 6 

like the dyer's hand " 111 7 

For since each hand hath put on " 127 5 

tender inward of thy hand " 128 6 

Love's own hand did make " 145 1 

Init in her maiden hand " 154 4 

by a virgin hand disarm'd " 154 8 

a careless hand of pride L C 30 

Or monarch's hands that lets not 

bounty fall " 41 

that never touch'd his hand " 141 

advance of yours that phraseless 

hand " 225 

But alas, my hand hath sworn PP 17 11 

Handled — idle, over-handled theme V A 770 

Handling — with too much handling " 560 

Handmaid — Her twinkling hand- 
maids too R L 787 

Hang — droop with grief and hang the 

head VA 666 

doth she hang her head " 1058 

Thy kinsmen hang their heads R L 521 

and hang their heads with mine " 793 

calls to mind where hangs a piece '" 1366 

Hang on such thorns Son 54 7 

And hang more praise " 72 7 

or none, or few, do hang " 73 2 

did hang in crooked curls L C 85 

plum that hangs uijon a tree PP 10 5 

HangM — to a cabin hang'd with care " 14 3 

Hani|:ing' — his braided hanging mane F^l 271 

still hanging by his neck " 593 

like a heavy-hanging bell R L 1493 

in my bosom's shop is hanging Son, 24 7 

Hanging her pale and pined cheek L C 32 

Hap — Tliat golden hap which their 

superiors want R L 42 

issueless shalt hap to die Son 9 3 

Hapless— to end a hapless life RL 1045 

Haply — Haply that name of chaste " 8 

Haply I think on thee Sm 29 10 

And hapl}' of our old acquaintance " 89 12 

wilt thou not haply say " 101 5 

Happier — Or ten times happier "68 

were happier than thou art "69 

the height of happier men " 32 8 

Happiness — O happiness enjoy'd but 

of a few R L 22 

Hiippy — And now the happy season V A 827 

treasure of his happy state R L 16 

But happy monarchs still are fear'd " 611 



Happy — some happy mean to end R L 1045 

sire, and child, and happy mother Son 8 11 

on the top of happy hours " 16 5 

Then happy I, that love " 25 13 

return in happy plight " 28 1 

then ten times hajapy me " 37 14 

shadow's form form happy show " 43 6 

how happy you make those " 57 12 

O, what a happy title " 92 11 
Happy to have thy love, happy to 

die " 92 12 

saucy jacks so happy are in this " 128 13 

Hapjyy — which happies those that pay " 6 6 

Harbinger — But thou shrieking 

harbinger P T 5 

Harbour — dark harbour for defame R L 768 

Hard— flinty, hard as steel VA 199 

borne so hard a mind " 203 

with his hard hoof he wounds " 367 

lest thy hard heart " 375 

hath made mine hard " 378 

where a heart is hard " 426 

holds her pulses hard " 476 

That hard heart of thine " 500 

with her hard embracing " 559 

Fearing some hard news R L 255 

Of hard misfortune " 1713 

how hard true sorrow hits Son 120 10 

■why 'twas beautiful and hard L C 211 

Faithful friends are hard to find PP 21 34 

Hard-believing — hard-believing 

love, how strange V A 985 

Harden — Tears harden lust R L 560 

Harden'd — Stone him with harden'd 

hearts " 978 

Harder — 0, if no harder than a stone " 593 

hearts, harder than, stones " 973 

thou harder hast engrossed Son 133 6 

Hardest — The hardest knife ill used " 95 14 

Hard-favour'd — Were I hard-fa- 

vour'd, foul VA 133 

Hard-favour'd tyrant " 931 

some hard-favour'd groom R L 1632 

Hare — at the timorous flying hare V A 674 

on foot the purblind hare " 679 

Harm — thence doth little harm " 195 

fortress'd from a world of harms R L 28 

no outward harm express'd " 91 

th' other feareth harm " 172 

including all foul harms " 199 

A little harm dune " 528 

should right poor ladies' harms " 1694 

For fear of harms L C 165 

Harm have I done to them " 194 

Harmed — cannot be easily harmed VA 627 

but ne'er was harmed L C 194 

Harnifnl— A harmful knife R L 1724 

of my harmful deeds So7i 111 2 

Harmless — Harmless Lucretia, 

marking what he tells R L 510 

Such harmless creatures " 1347 

and give the harmless show " 1507 

sheathed in her harmless breast " 1723 

Harmony — Lest the deceiving har- 
mony should run V A 781 

Harsh — churlish, harsh in voice " 134 

Harsh, featureless, and rude Son 11 10 

Harsh-sounding — heavenly tune 

harsh-sounding VA 431 



HARVEST 



117 



HATH 



Harvest — the harvest of his wits It L 859 

should that harvest reap So7i 128 7 

Hast — hast thou a tongue VA 427 

when thou hast on foot the pur- 

blina hare " 679 

thou hast no eyes to see " 9o9 

Why hast thou cast " 951 

what treasure hast thou lost " 1075 

as thou hast pretended It L 576 

Hast thou put on his shape " 597 

Hast thou command " 624 

which thou hast here deprived " 1752 

my image thou hast torn " 1762 

no form of thee hast left behind Sun 9 6 
Hast thon, the master-mistress of 

my passion " 20 2 

hast all the all of me " 31 

at that which thou hast done " 35 

What hast thou then " 40 

That thou hast her " 42 

thou hast the strength of laws " 49 

thou hast pass'd by the ambush " 70 
thou hast but lost the dregs of life " 74 
thou hast too grossly dyed " 99 

Who hast by waning grown " 126 

thou harder hast engrossed " 183 

thou hast both him and me " 134 

thou hast thy ' Will " 135 

hast thou forged hooks , " 137 

hast thou this powerful might " 150 

Whence hast thou this becoming " 150 
Whilst thou hast wherewith to 
spend PP 21 

Hsiste — devouring all in haste 
And all in haste 
Her more than haste 
And in her haste 
return again in haste 
So his unhallow'd haste 
with their fresh falls' haste 
The cause craves haste 
to my lord with more than haste 
that doth behold his haste 
by thy continual haste Son 123 

Haste — I haste me to my bed " 27 

why should I haste me thence " 51 

Hasten — minutes hasten to their end " 60 

Hastcth— and hasteth to his horse V 
hasteth to a myrtle grove 

Hasting' — Hasting to feed her fawn 

Hasty— Thy hasty spring still blasts R L 

Hat — she heaveth up his hat V A 

some, untuck'd, descended her 
sheaved hat L C 

Hatch — cuckoos hatch in sparrows' 



PP 

VA 



R 



nests 

Hate — To make thee hate 
there is no hate in loving 
if not, enforced hate 
to fine the hate of foes 
or begets him hate 
possess'd with murderous hate 
Shall hate be fairer lodged 
is in my love and hate 
than hate's known injury 
in your waken'd hate 
Time's love or to Time's hate 
and thy dear virtue hate 
Hate of my sin 



RL 
VA 
RL 



Son 



14 
1 
2 
1 

13 
9 
9 
5 
3 
6 

13 
1 
7 
1 
5 

36 

57 

870 

909 

1029 

321 

552 

650 

1295 

1332 

1668 

11 

1 

3 

2 

258 

865 

876 

49 

351 

31 

849 

711 

240 

668 

936 

1005 

5 

10 

12 

12 

12 

3 

1 

2 



Hate — and see just cause of hate Son IHO 10 

In vowing new hate " 152 4 

Ila/e — I hate not love, but your VA 789 

hates himself for his offence R L 738 

him whom thou dost hate " 89 14 

Then hate me when thou wilt Son 90 1 

the sound that said ' I hate " 145 2 

' I hate ' she aller'd with an end " 145 9 

'I hate' from hate " 145 13 

But, love, hate on " 149 13 

Hated— Past reason hated " 129 7 

Hateful— Hateful divorce of love VA ..... 932 

to his hateful name " 994 

and wretched hateful days R L 101 

Hateful it is ; there is no hate " 240 

'Ohateful,vaporous, and foggy Night" 771 

hateful cuckoos hatch in sparrows' 

nests " 849 

the hateful foe bewray'd " .... 1698 

Hatefully — But hatefully at random VA 940 

Hatetli — Who hateth thee that I do 

call my friend Son 149 5 

Hath — the world hath ending VA 12 

yet hath he been my captive " 101 

hath he hung his lance " 103 

for my sake hath learn'd " 105 

the heart hath treble wrong " 329 

hath made mine hard " 378 

The sea hath bounds, but deep de- 
sire hath none " f89 

eye so full hath fed " 399 

hath done me double wrong " 429 

Hath taught them " 501 

hath ended in the west " 530 

hath caught the yielding prey " 547 

She hath assay'd as much " 608 

hath deserved a greater fee " 609 

he hath a battle set " 619 

Beauty hath nought to do " 638 

hath she bribed the Destinies " 733 

semblance he hath fed " 795 

Hath dropp'd a precious jewel " 823 

For who hath she to spend " 847 

When he hath ceased " 919 

web that she hath wrought " 991 

that hath done thee wrong " 1005 

Grief hath two tongues " 1007 

when he hath sung " 1095 

and hatli kill'd him so " 1110 

hath done her beauty wrong i2 L SO 

that hath engirt " 221 

Hath barr'd him " 340 

impiety hath wrought " 341 

fear's frost hath dissolution " 355 

That thinks she hath beheld " 451 

Thy beauty hath ensnared thee " 485 

Only he hath an eye to gaze " 496 

The wolf hath seized " 677 

But she hath lost " 687 

And he hath won " 688 

that hath lost in gain ■ " 730 

a wandering wasp hath crept " 839 

And scarce hath eyes " 857 

' So then he hath it " 862 

which wretchedness hath chained " 900 

what he hath said " 915 

' Why hath thy servant oppor- 
tunities " 932 

hath Tarquin rifled me " 1050 



HATH 



118 



HAVE 



Hath— For day hath nought R L 1092 

grief is dumb and hath no words " 1105 

■winter that the flower hath kill'd " 1255 

one hatli power to tell " 1288 

So woe hath wearied woe " 1363 

that hath done him wrong " 14tj7 

that hath transgressed so " 1481 

Whose deed hath made herself " 1566 

hath overslipp'd her thought " 1576 

with painted images hath spent " 1577 

He hath no power " 1594 

Hath thee befall'n " 1599 

whatspitehaththyfaircolourspent " 1600 

it hath to say " 1618 

sad task hath not said " 1699 

Hath served a dumb arrest " 17S0 

and too late hath spill'd " 1801 

that she hath kill'd " 1803 

hath in the world an end Son 9 11 

Nature hath not made " 11 9 

hath all too short a date " 18 4 

that more hath more express'd " 23 12 

what silent love hath writ " 23 13 
Mine eye liath play'd the painter 

and hath stell'd " 24 1 

That hath his windows glazed " 24 8 
Thy merit hath my duty strongly 

knit " 26 2 

Hath dear religious love " 31 6 

region cloud hath mask'd him " 33 12 

That she hath thee " 42 3 

my friend hath found " 42 10 

thy love hath cast " 49 3 
Since every one hath, every one, 

one shade " 53 3 

Hath been before " 59 2 
Hath travell'd on to age's steepy 

night " 63 5 

Paiia hath taught " 64 11 

For she hath no exchequer " 67 11 

._ the eye hath shown " 69 8 

hath in this line some interest " 74 3 

every alien pen hath got my use " 78 3 

such virtue hath my pen " 81 13 

my heart hath 'scaped " 90 5 

humour hath its adjunct " 91 5 

my life hath end " 92 6 

a winter hath my absence been " 97 1 

Hath put a spirit of youth " 98 3 

it hath my added praise " 103 4 
Hath motion, and mine eye may 

be deceived " 104 12 

moon hath her eclipse " 107 5 

Which hath not figured " 108 2 

hath the mind no part " 113 7 

errors hath my heart committed "119 5 

Whilst it hath thought " 119 6 

hand hath put on nature's power " 127 5 

beauty hath no name " 127 7 
music hath a far more pleasing 

sound " 130 10 

Thy face hath not the power " 131 6 

cruel eye hath taken " 133 o 

. Whoever hath her wish " 135 1 

Hath left me, and I desperate " 147 7 

what eyes hath Love " 148 1 

over me hath power L C 74 

The one a palate hath " 167 

Nature hath charged me " 220 



Hath — In thee hath neither sting L C 265 

and chill extincture hath " 294 

how often hath she joined P P 1 7 

to please me hath she coined "79 

Heart hath his hope " 15 10 

learned man hath got the lady " 16 15 

my hand hath sworn " 17 11 

Love hath forlorn me " 18 21 

thine eye hath chose the dame " 19 1 

hath taught her thus to say " 19 22 

Love hath reason, reason none P T 47 

Hatred — no hatred in thine eye Son 93 5 

Haunted — following where he ... , L C 130 

Have — Which long have rain'd V A 83 

I have been woo'd " 97 

thou unask'd shalt have " 102 

The heat I have from thence " 195 

if thou wilt have twain " 210 

since I have hemm'd thee here " 229 

what a horse should have " 299 

and thou shalt have it " 374 

For I have heard " 413 

That they have murder'd " 502 

you shall have a kiss " 536 

though the rose have prickles " 574 

You have no reason " 612 

till they have singled " 693 

time thou needs must have " 759 

If love have lent you " 775 

what have you urged " 787 

have seen him no more " 819 

they long have gazed " 927 

at him should have tied " 947 

they have wept till now " 1062 

That what they have not R L 135 

by hoping more, they have but less " 137 

Of that we have " 152 

The thing we have " 153 

true resjiect should have " 201 

Might have excuse " 235 

Poor wretches have remorse " 269 

to have him heard " 306 

might have reposed still " 382 

' I have debated " 498 

Shall have thy trespass " 524 

' Have done,' quoth he " ..... 645 
Have batter'd down her conse- 
crated wall " 723 

true eyes have never practised " 748 

To have their unseen siu remain " 753 

So should I have " 789 

I have no one to blush " 792 

Have no perfection of my summer 

left. " 837 

We have no good that we can say " 873 

Truth and Virtue have to do with 

thee " 911 

would else have come " 916 

' Let him have time " 981 

Let him have time " 982 

Let him have time " 983 

Let him have time " 984 

Let him have time " 985 

' Let him have time " 988 

Let him have time " 990 

Have time to wail " 994 

such an otBce have " 1000 

Have heard the cause " 1178 

that dear jewel I have lost " 1191 



HAVE 



119 



HE 



Have — For men have marble, wo- 
men waxen minds R L 1240 

for I have them here " 1290 

creatures have a true respect " 1347 

where cares have carved some " 1445 

the fear that false hearts have " 1512 

She would have said " 1535 

dolour others have endured " 1582 

should have slain her foe " 1827 

I have astronomy Son 14 2 

eyes for eyes have done " 24 9 

eyes have drawn " 24 10 

have supposed dead " 31 2 

morning have I seen " 33 1 

yet I have still the loss " 34 10 

Eoses have tliorns " 35 2 

This wish I have " 37 14 

till she have prevailed " 41 8 

Thee have I not " 48 9 

you have some part " 53 13 

canker-blooms have full as deep " 54 5 

I have no precious time " 57 3 

When you have bid " 57 8 

subjects worse have given " 59 14 

hours have drained " 63 3 

"When I have seen " 64 1 

When I have seen " 64 5 

have seen such interchange " 64 9 

But weep to have that " 64 14 

unless this miracle have might " 65 13 

earth can have but earth " 74 7 

So oft have I invoked thee " 78 1 

Have added feathers "73 7 
Your name from hence immortal 

life shall have " 81 5 

yet when they have devised " 82 9 

therefore have I slept " 83 5 

Thus have I had thee " 87 13 

griefs have done their spite " 90 10 

Happy to have thy love " 92 12 

They that have power " 94 1 

what a mansion have those vices got " 95 9 

what freezings liave I felt " 97 3 

From you have I been absent " 98 1 

If Time have any wrinkle " 100 10 

Have from the forests shook " 104 4 

seasons have I seen " 104 6 

have often lived alone " 105 13 

pen would have express'd " 106 7 

Have eyes to wonder " 106 14 

if I have ranged " 109 5 

'tis true I have gone here and there " 110 1 

that I have look'd on truth "110 5 

done, have what shall have no end "110 9 

lines that I before have writ " 115 1 

that I have scanted all " 117 1 

That I have frequent been " 117 5 

That I have hoisted sail "117 7 

potions have I drunk "119 1 
How have mine eyes out of their 

spheres been fitted "119 7 

thrice more than I have spent " 119 14 

You've pass'd a hell of time " 120 6 

have no leisure taken " 120 7 

might have remember'd " 120 9 

Have faculty by nature to subsist " 122 6 

before have heard " 123 8 

who have lived for crime " 124 14 

Have I not seen " 125 5 



Have — and in quest to have 
I have seen roses 
Have put on black 
now I have confess'd 
Him have I lost 
heart and eyes have erred 
to have years told 
looks have been mine enemies 
That have profaned 
If thou dost seek to have 
the thing she would have stay 
mayst have thy 'Will 
Two loves I have of comfort 
For I have sworn thee fair 
Which have no correspondence 
Or, if they have 
For I have sworn deep oaths 
I have sworn thee fair 
Ink would have seem'd 
have been a spreading flower 
ere he desire have granted 
' So many have, that never 
Have of my suffering youth 
I have been call'd unto 
that mine eyes have seen 
Harm have I done to them 
I have received from many 
The thing we have not 
Have emptied all their fountains 
loves not to have years told 
Two loves I have of comfort 
and yet no cause I have 
that wont to have play'd 
Have you not heard it said 
They have at commandment 

Having — But having no defects 
having writ on death 
And having felt the sweetness 
But having thee at vantage 
for having so offended 
Having lost the fair discovery 
Having no fair to lose 
Which having all 
In having much, torments us 
Having solicited the eternal power ' 
Having no other pleasure 
Who, having two sweet babes 
For having traffic with thyself 
And Raving climb'd 
And having thee 
That having such a scope 
Had, having, and in quest to have 
having so short a lease 

Havings — Whose rarest havings 

Hawk — full-fed hound or gorged . . . , 
Some in their hawks 
Of more delight than hawks 

Hazard — Such hazard now must dot 
ing Tarquin make 

He — Hunting he loved, but love he 
laugh'd to scorn 
He red for shame 
as he was down 
now doth he frown 
He burns with bashful 
He saith she is immodest 
Panting he lies and breatheth 
Still is he suUen, still he lours and 
frets 



Son 


129 


10 


" 


130 


5 


" 


132 


3 


" 


134 


1 


" 


134 


13 


" 


137 


13 


" 


138 


12 


" 


139 


10 


" 


142 


6 


" 


142 


13 


" 


143 


4 


" 


143 


13 


" 


144 


1 


" 


147 


13 


" 


148 


2 


" 


148 


3 


" 


152 


9 


" 


152 


13 


LC 




54 
75 
131 
141 
178 
181 
190 
194 
206 
240 
255 


PP 


1 


12 


" 


2 


1 


" 


10 


7 


" 


18 


29 


" 


19 


41 


" 


21 


46 


VA 




138 
509 
553 
635 
810 
828 
1083 


PL 

3r " 




96 

151 

344 

860 

1161 


Soji 


4 


9 


" 


7 


5 


" 


91 


12 


" 


103 


2 


e " 


129 


10 


" 


146 


5 


LC 




235 


PL 




694 


Son 


91 


4 


" 


91 


11 


PL 




155 


VA 




4 
36 
43 
45 
49 
53 
62 

75 



HE 



120 



HE 



He;— Look how he can VA 79 

he take truce with her " 82 

did he raise his chin " 85 

so offers he to give " 88 

He winks and turns " 90 

conquers where he comes " 100 

yet hath he been " 101 

Hath he hung his lan,ce " .. .. 103 

he that overruled " 109 

Yet was he servile " 112 

So he were like him " 180 

he will not in her arms " 226 

he struggles to be gone " 227 

He might be buried " 244 

there he came to lie " 245 

he could not die " 246 

away he springs " 258 

to her straight goes he " 264 

he leaps, he neighs, he bounds " 265 

he breaks asunder " _... 266 

his hard hoof he wounds " 267 

The iron bit he crusheth " 269 

what he was controlled with " 270 

vapours doth he send " 274 

he trots, as if he told the steps " 277 

Anon he rears upright " 279 

What recketh he " 283 

What cares he now " 285 

He sees his love, and nothing else 

he sees " 287 

he did not lack " 299 

he scuds far off, and there he stares " 301 

Anon he starts " 302 

he now prepares " 303 

And whether he run or fly " 304 

He looks upon his love " 307 

Scorns the heat he feels " 311 

He vails his tail " 314 

he stamps and bites " 316 

how he is enraged " 317 

He sees her coming " 337 

He holds her in his eye " 842 

just before him as he sat " 349 

my hand,' saith he " 373 

' For shame,' he cries " 379 

Thy palfrey as he should " 385 

like a jade he stood " 391 

But when he saw " 393 

He held such petty bondage " 394 

'I know not love,' quoth he " 409 

before he barketh " 459 

For sharply he did think " 470 

He wrings her nose, he strikes her on" 475 

He bends her fingers " 476 

He chafes her lips; a thousand 

ways he seeks " 477 

He kisses her ; and she " 479 

so he will kiss her " 480 

He cheers the morn " 484 

' Fair queen,' quoth he " 523 

and ere he says 'Adieu " 537 

Till breathless he " 541 

He with her plenty " 545 

He now obeys " 563 

When he did frown " 571 

prays her that he may " 578 

He carries thence " 582 

He tells her, no ; to-morrow he in- 
tends " 587 



He— He on her belly falls VA 594 

He will not manage her, although 

he mount her " 598 

Fie, fie, he says " 611 

he whetteth still " 617 

he hath a battle set '• 619 

when he doth fret " 621 

where'er he goes " 622 

Being moved, he strikes " 623 

on the lion he will venture " 628 

through whom he rushes " 630 

Alas, he nought esteems " 631 

as he roots the mead " 636 

How^he outruns the wind " 681 

He cranks and crosses " 682 

through the which he goes " 683 

Sometime he runs " 685 

alarums he doth hear " 700 

' No matter where,' quoth he " 715 

' I am,' quoth he " 718 

He hath fed " 795 

With this, he breaketh " 811 

So glides he in the night " 816 

He replies with howling " 918 

When he hath ceased " 919 

when he lived " 935 

if he be dead " 937 

Then he had spoke " 943 

'Tis he, foul creature '" 1005 

he's author of thy slander " 1006 

For he being dead " 1019 

He could not die, he is not dead " 1060 

he put his bonnet on " 1087 

he would not fear him " 1094 

when he hath sung " 1095 

If he had spoke " 1097 

When he beheld his shadow " 1099 

when he was by " 1101 

He fed them with " 1104 

livery that he wore " 1107 

entertainment that he gave " 1108 

If he did see his face " 1109 

He thought to kiss him " 1110 

He ran upon the boar " 1112 

But he is dead, and never did he 

bless " 1119 

he himself is reft " 1174 

for he the night before R L 15 

he should keep unknown " 34 

with swift intent he goes " 46 

Well was he welcomed " 51 

Now thinks he that her husband's 

shallow tongue " 78 

For that he colour'd " 92 

he pineth still for more " 98 

He stories to her ears " 106 

He makes excuses " 114 

long he questioned " 122 

himself he must forsake " 157 

When shall he think " 159 

When he himself himself confounds " 160 

on a flint he softly smiteth " 176 

forthwith he lighteth " 178 

he doth premeditate " 183 

he doth debate " 185 

he doth despise " 187 

Will he not wake " 219 

Or were he not " 234 

But as he is my kinsman " 237 



HE 



121 



HE 



He — holds he disputation Ji L 246 

Quoth he, 'She took me " 253 

my captain, and he leadeth " 271 

Away he steals " 283 

That now he vows " 287 

he still pursues his fear " 308 

hy the light he spies " 316 

He takes it from the rushes " 318 

He in the worst sense construes " 324 

He takes for accidental things " 326 

' So, so,' quoth he " 330 

ere rich at home he lands " 336 

Now is he come " 337 

the blessed thing he sought ", 340 

to pray he doth begin " 342 

Even there he starts: quoth he, 'I 

must deflower " 348 

the door he opens wide " 359 

wickedly he stalks " 365 

about he walks " 367 

What could he see but mightily he 

noted " 414 

"What did he note but strongly he 

desired " 415 

What he beheld, on that he firmly 

doted " 416 

his wilful eye he tired " 417 

admiration he admired " 418 

Which he by dumb demeanour 

seeks " 474 

he commits this ill " 476 

Thus he replies " 477 

Only he hath an eye " 496 

dotes on what he looks " 497 

he shakes aloft " 505 

if he mount he dies " 508 

marking what he tells " 510 

' Luereoe,' quoth he " 512 

He rouseth up himself " 541 

he doth but dally " 554 

to his borrow'd bed he make retire " 573 

He is no woodman " 580 

Must he in thee " 618 

He learn'd to sin " 630 

' Have done,' quoth he " 645 

' No more,' quoth he " 667 

he sets his foot upon the light " 673 

He pens her piteous clamours " 681 

And he hath won what he would 

lose again " 688 

Ere he can see " 704 

he sounds this doom " ...„ 717 

he stands disgraced " 718 

through the dark night he stealeth " 729 

he left behind " 734 

And he the burthen of a guilty 

mind " 735 

He like a thievish dog creeps " 736 

He scowls, and hates himself " 738 

He faintly flies " 740 

He runs, and chides " 742 

He thence departs " 743 

He in his speed looks for the 

morning light " 745 

ere he go to bed " 776 

Ere he arrive " 781 

as he is but Night's child " 785 

he would distain " 786 

How he in peace is wounded " 831 



He — he that gives them RL 833 

he did complain him " 845 

like still-pining Tantalus he sits " 858 

' So then he hath it when he can- 
not use it " 862 

where he the lamb may get " 878 

He gratis comes " 914 

what he hath said " 915 

but he was stay'd " 917 

till he render right 'i 943 

' The baser is he " 1002 

He shall not boast " 1063 

'Nor shall he smile " 1065 

He ten times pines " 1115 

That he may vow " 1179 

Lest he should hold it " 1315 

when he is by " 1318 

though he blush'd " 1344 

She thought he blush'd " 1354 

she thought he spied • " 1358 

till he return again " 1359 

he saw them quake " 1393 

swears he did her wrong " 1462 

with the blunt swains he goes " 1504 

He entertain'd a show " 1514 

he had fainted " 1543 

For every tear he falls " 1551 

That he finds means " 1561 

in her sad face he stares " 1591 

He hath no power " 1594 

At last he takes her " 1597 

groom of thine,' quoth he " 1632 

he set his sword " 1640 

But wretched as he is, he strives 

in vain " 1665 

What he breathes out " 1666 

' He, he,' she says " 1717 

But more than he " 1718 

' He, he, fair lords, 'tis he " 1721 

He falls, and bathes " 1775 

what he said " 1785 

as if the name he tore " 1787 

He weeps for her " 1798 

He with the Romans " 1811 

But now he throws " 1814 

quoth he, ' arise " 1818 

This said, he struck his hand " 1842 

He doth again repeat " 1848 

Or who is he so fond Son 3 7 

he reeleth from the day " 7 10 

when he takes thee hence " 12 14 

As he takes from you " 15 14 

forgot for w'hich he toil'd " 25 12 

But since he died " 32 13 

he was but one hour mine " 33 11 

And he that calls on thee " 38 11 

where he would be " 44 8 

he answers with a groan " 50 11 

he went wilful-slow " 51 13 

he will not every hour survey " 52 3 

he thinks no ill " 57 14 

whereof now he's king " 63 6 

That he shall never cut " 63 11 

and he in them still green " 63 14 

with infection should he live " 67 1 

Why should he live " 67 9 

He robs thee of, and pays " 79 8 
He lends thee virtue, and he stole 

that word " 79 9 



HE 



122 



HEAR 



79 


10 


79 


11 


79 


13 


79 


U 



80 10 



80 


12 


80 


13 


84 


7 


86 


7 


86 


9 


96 


10 


101 


9 


101 


14 


107 


12 


134 


1 


134 


5 


134 


6 


134 


7 


134 


14 


151 


7 


151 


11 



He — beauty doth he give Son 

he can afford " 

that -n-hich he doth say " 

Since what he owes " 
he upon your soundless deep doth 

ride " 
He of tall building and of goodly 

pride " 

Then if he thrive " 
But he that writes of you, If he 

can tell " 
No, neither he, nor his compeers " 
He, nor that affable familiar ghost " 

he could his looks translate " 

Because he needs no praise " 

hence as he shows now " 
While he insults o'er dull and 

speechless tribes " 

confess'd that he is thine " 

nor he will not be free " 

and he is kind " 
He learn'd but surety-like to write " 

He pays the whole " 

tell my body that he may " 

He is contented " 
So slides he down upon his grained 

bat L C 64 

sits he by her side " 65 

' When he again desires her " 66 

For niaiden-tongued he was " 100 

was he such a storm " 101 

'Well could he ride " lOG 

what stop he makes " 109 

Or he his manage " 112 

He had the dialect " 125 

'That he did in the general " 127 

following where he haunted " 130 

bewitch'd, ere he desire " 131 

for him what he would say " 132 

Till thus he 'gan besiege me " 177 

eyes he did dismount " 281 

as he to me appears " 299 

and he takes and leaves " 305 

whom he would maim " 312 

Against the thing he sought he 

would exclaim " 313 

When he most burn'd " 314 

He preaoh'd pure maid " 315 

concealed fiend he cover'd " 317 

Or he refused to take P P 4 10 

He rose and ran away " 4 14 

Anon he comes "69 
He, spy ing her, bounced in,whereas 

he stood " 6 13 

to singing he betakes " 8 12 

the boy he should not pass "98 

he saw more wounds than one " 9 13 

And as he fell to her " 11 4 

' he seized on my lips " 11 9 

fetched breath, away he skips " 11 11 

'Air,' quoth he " 17 9 

King Pandion he is dead " 21 23 

'Pity but he were a king " 21 42 

If he be addict to vice " 21 43 

If to women he be bent " 21 45 

He that is thy friend indeed " 21 51 

He will help thee in thy need " 21 52 

If thou sorrow, he will weep " 21 53 

If thou wake, he cannot sleep " 21 54 



He— He with thee doth bear a part P P 21 56 

Head — And rein his proud head VA 14 

hold up thy head " 118 

she shakes her head " 223 

small head and nostril wide " 296 

and hang the head " 666 

cabins of her head " 1038 

doth she hang her head " 1058 

She bows her head " 1171 

greedy eyeballs in his head Ji L 368 

her head entombed is " 390 

Thy kinsmen hang their heads " 521 

clamours in her head " 681 

about his golden head " 777 

and hang their heads with mine " 793 

lean'd on another's head " 1415 

a face, a leg, a head " 1427 

Upon his head that hath " 1481 

to rest thy weary head " 1621 

With head declined " 1661 

Lifts up his burning head Son 7 2 

Till then not show my head " 26 14 

begins a journey in my head " 27 3 

second life on second head " 68 7 

black wires grow on her head " 130 4 

hath Love put in my head " 148 1 

Upon her head a platted hive LC 8 

Take counsel of some wiser head P P 19 5 

Headlong — fury of his speed li L 501 

Heal— That heals the wounds Son 34 8 

Healeth — the wound that nothing 

healeth R L 731 

Health — Health to thy person " 1305 

Of thy fair health Son 45 12 

No news but health " 140 8 

Healthful— to medicine a . . . . state " 118 11 

a bath and healthful remedy " 154 11 

Hear — nor ears to hear nor see V A 437 

not see, nor hear, nor touch " 440 

alarums he doth hear " 700 

hears the passing-bell " 702 

and hear a little more " 709 

she hears no tidings " 867 

she hears them chant it " 869 

By this she hears " 877 

hears some huntsman holloa " 973 

she hears a merry horn " 1025 

and gently hear him " 1096 

husband's welfare did she hear R L 263 

and hears no heedful friends " 495 

as fowl hear falcon's bells " 511 

by heaven, I will not hear thee " 667 

As well to hear as grant " 915 

O, hear me then " 930 

when he is by to hear her " 1318 

more than hear them told " 1324 

of sorrow that we hear " 1328 

long to hear her words " 1610 

to hear the hateful foe " 1698 

Music to hear, why hear'st thou Son 8 1 

To hear with eyes " 23 14 

Than you shall hear the surly " 71 2 

hear this, thou age unbred " 104 13 

I love to hear her speak " 130 9 

The more I hear and see " 150 10 

O, hear me tell L C 253 

Thou lovest to hear PP 8 9 
Lest that my mistress hear my song " 19 50 

To hear her secrets " 19 54 



HEAR 



123 



HEART 



Hear— That to hear it was great pity P P 21 12 

That to hear her " 21 15 

they cannot hear thee " 21 21 

Heard — For I have heard VA 413 

As if they heard " 1126 

The threshold grates the door to 

have him lieard R L 306 

Have heard the cause " 1178 

that we before have heard them 

told Son 123 8 

Heard where his plants L C 171 

Have you not heard it P P 19 41 

Hear'st — thou hear'st me moralize V A 712 

why hear'st thou music sadly Son 8 1 

Hearer — Will tie the hearers B L 818 

Hearing — or I had no hearing V A 428 

And hearinsc him " 944 

And in my hearing B L ..... 1123 

Hearing you praised Son 85 9 

with his hearing to divide L C 67 

Hearken — To hearken if his foes VA 699 

She hearkens for his hounds " 868 

Hearsay — Let them say more that 

like of hearsay well Son 21 13 

Hearsed — within a puddle's womb 

is hearsed R L 657 

Heart — Is thine own heart VA 157 

the heart hath treble wrong " 329 

the heart's attorney " 335 

heart all whole as thine, thy heart " 370 

' Give me my heart " 374 

thy hard heart do steel it " 375 

Because Adonis' heart " 378 

set the heart on fire " 388 

from my unyielding heart " 423 

where a heart is hard " 426 

heart's deep-sore wounding " 432 

that hard heart of thine " 500 

this poor heart of mine " 502 

buys my heart from me " 517 

look well to her heart " 580 

For m)^ sick heart " 584 

My boding heart pants " 647 

Knocks at my heart " 6.59 

make my faint heart bleed " 669 

my heart stands armed " 779 

And then my little heart " 783 

my heart longs not " 785 

my heart of teen " 808 

now she beats her heart " 829 

enters to surprise her heart " 890 

cleaves an infant's heart " 942 

Thy coward heart " 1024 

never wound the heart " 1042 

my heart to lead " 1072 

Heavy hearts lead " 1073 

My throbbing heart " 1186 

our hearts oft tainted be B L 38 

my false heart bleed " 228 

the heart that shadows dreadeth " 270 

My heart shall never countermand " 276 

But with a pure appeal seeks to 

the heart " 293 

But his hot heart, which fond de- 
sire " 314 

is his heart misled " 369 

Anon his beating heart, alarums 

striking " 433 

His drumming heart cheers up " 435 



Heart— the heart of all her land B L 439 

May feel her heart, poor citizen " 435 

but his heart granteth " 558 

and wreck-threatening heart " 590 

From a pure heart " 625 

She wakes her heart " 759 

Stone him with hardeu'd hearts " 978 

against my heart " 1137 

Faint not, faint heart " 1209 

drown their eyes or break their 

hearts " 1239 

either cipher'd cither's heart " 1.396 

the fear that false hearts hav« " 1512 

And then against my heart " 1640 

as if her heart would break " 1716 

so thick come in his poor heart's 

aid " 1784 

do not steep thy heart " 1828 

A woman's gentle heart Son 20 3 
raiment of my heart " 22 6 
Bearing thy heart " 22 11 
Presume not on thy heart " 22 13 
weakens his own heart " 23 4 
table of my heart " 24 2 
know not the heart " 24 14 
endeared with all hearts " 31 1 
absent from thy heart " 41 2 
Mine eye and heart are at a mor- 
tal war " 46 " 1 
Mine eye my heart thy picture's 

sight " 46 3 
My heart mine eye the freedom of " 46 4 
My heart doth plead " 46 5 
tenants to the heart " 46 10 
dear heart's part " 46 12 
And my heart's right thine in- 
ward love of heart " 46 14 
Betwixt mine eye and heart " 47 1 
Or heart in love " 47 4 
bids my heart " 47 6 
mine eye is my heart's guest " 47 7 
Awakes my heart to heart's and 

eye's delight " 47 14 
But you like none, none you, for 

constant heart " 53 14 
It is so grounded inward in my 

heart " 62 4 

the thought of hearts can mend " 69 2 

kingdom of hearts shouldst owe " 70 14 

when my heart hath 'scaped " 90 5 
Thy looks with me, thy heart in 

other place " 93 4 

false heart's history " 93 7 
Whate'er thy thoughts or thy 

heart's workings be " 93 11 

Take heed, dear heart " 95 13 

never say that I was false of heart " 109 1 

gave my heart another youth " 110 7 

it no form delivers to the heart " 113 5 
What wretched errors hath my 

heart committed " 119 5 

so long as brain and heart " 122 5 

let me be obsequious in thy heart " 125 9 

my dear doting heart " 131 3 

thy heart torments me with disdain " 132 2 

let it then as well beseem thy heart " 132 10 
Beshrew that heart that makes my 

heart to groan " 133 1 

Prison my heart " 133 9 



HEART 



124 



HEAVENLY 



Heart — But then my friend's heart 

let my poor heart bail Son 133 10 

let my heart be bis guard " 133 11 

the judgement of my heart is tied " 137 8 

Why should my heart think " 137 9 

Which my heart knows " 137 10 

my heart and ej^es have erred " 137 13 
That thy unkindness lays upon 

my heart " 139 2 

Dear heart, forbear " 139 6 

Though thy proud heart go wide " 140 14 

'tis my heart that loves " 141 3 

Dissuade one foolish heart " 141 10 

thy proud heart's slave " 141 12 

Eoot pity in thy heart " 142 11 
Straight in her heart did mercy 

come " 145 5 

Witli insufficiency my heart to sway " 150 2 

true hearts had warni'd " 154 6 
supposed them mistress of his 

heart L C 142 

of his foul adulterate heart " 175 

my heart so much as warmed " 191 

Kept hearts in liveries " 195 

Encami^'d in hearts " 203 

Now all these hearts that do on 

mine depend " 274 

What rocky heart to water will 

not wear " 291 

That not a heart which in his level 

came " 309 

that forced thunder from his heart 

did fly " 325 

Persuade my heart P P 3 3 

. To win his heart she touch'd him "47 

My heart doth charge the watch " 15 2 

Heart hath his hope " 15 10 

Heart's renying " 18 7 

Heart is bleeding " 18 23 

Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55 

Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T 29 

Heart-easing — keep him from heart- 
easing words R L 1782 

Hearted — 'gan she cry, ' flint-hearted 

boy V A 95 

at least kind-hearted prove Son 10 12 

Hearten— And therein heartens up 

his servile powers R L 295 

Heartily— I heartily beseech theu V A 404 

Heart-Inflaming— his ))rand Son 154 2 

Heartless — To sound a parley to his 

heartless foe R L 471 

Which heartless peasants did so 

well resemble " 1392 

Through heartless ground PP 18 35 

Heart-strings— Shall tune our .... R L 1141 

Heart-wish'd — burn'din luxury i C 314 

Heat — passenger in summer's heat V A ..... 91 

tired in the mid-day heat " 177 

Shall cool the heat " 190 

The heat I have from thence " 195 

scorns the heat he feels " 311 

O rash-false heat R L 48 

Can curb his heat " 706 

knows not parching heat " 1145 

Thy heat of lust " 1473 

Which erst from heat did canopy Son 12 6 
That it nor grows with heat " 124 12 

A dateless, lively heat " 153 6 



Heat — from Love's fire took heat Son 154 10 
Love's fire heats water " 154 14 

Heating — by heating of the blood V A 742 

Heave — to heave the owner out R L 413 

labour hence to heave thee " 58G 

Oft did she heave her napkin L C 15 

Heaved-up — Her joy with .... hand R L Ill 

my heaved-up hands appeal " 638 

Heaven — that shines from heaven V A 193 

resounds like heaven's thunder " 268 

in earth or heaven " 493 

that shadow heaven's light " 533 

stealing moulds from heaven " 7.30 

in high heaven's despite " 731 

Love to heaven is fled " 793 

as bright as heaven's beauties R L 13 

the heavens had him lent " 17 

greets heaven for his success " 112 

from the heaven of his thought " 338 

As if the heavens should counte- 
nance his sin " 343 

The eye of heaven is out " 356 

By heaven and earth " 572 

To all the host of heaven " 598 

by heaven, I will not hear thee " 667 

for heaven and Collatine " 1166 

As heaven, it seem'd " 1372 

By heaven's fair sun " 1837 

that I in heaven find Son 14 8 

Though yet, heaven knows, it is 

but as " 17 3 

the eye of heaven shines " 18 5 

Who heaven itself for ornament 

doth use " 21 3 

That heaven's air in this huge ron- 
dure hems " 21 8 
fix'd in heaven's air " 21 12 
when clouds do blot the heaven " 28 10 
And trouble deaf heaven " 29 3 
sings hymns at heaven's gate " 29 12 
when heaven's sun staineth " 33 14 
in heaven's sweetest air " 70 4 
But heaven in thy creation did de- 
cree " 93 9 
do inherit heaven's graces " 94 5 
welcome, next my heaven the best " 110 13 
To .shun the heaven that leads men " 129 14 
And yet, by heaven, I think " 130 13 
not the morning sun of heaven " 132 5 
From heaven to hell " 145 12 
sees not till heaven clears " 148 12 

spite of heaven's fell rage L C 13 

To sing heaven's praise P P 5 14 

Wish'd himself the heaven's breath " 17 8 
There is no heaven, by holy then " 19 45 

Heaven-Uued— The sapphire L C 215 

Heavenly — calls it moisture VA 64 

this heavenly and earthly sun " 198 

heavenly tune harsh-sounding " 431 

The heavenly moisture " 542 

her heavenly image sits R L 288 

the steep-up heavenly hill Son 7 5 

Such heavenly touches ne'er 

touch'd " 17 8 

with heavenly alchemy " 33 4 

the heavenly rhetoric of thine 

eye PP 3 1 

thou a heavenly love "37 

whose heavenly touch "85 



HEAVETH 



125 



HER 



Heareth — she heaveth up bis hat I'.l 351 

faintly she up-heaveth " 4S2 

Heavily— And .... from woe to woe Son 30 10 
Which heavily he answers " 50 11 

Heaviness — request to know your 

heaviness E L 1283 

this moody heaviness " 1S02 

Heavy — think it heavy unto thee VA 156 

heavy, dark, disliking eye " 182 

Her Iieavy anthem " 8.39 

What may a heavy groan " 950 

Heavy hearts lead " 1073 

in his ears a heavy tale " 1125 

weariness witli heavy spright R L 121 

When lieavy sleep had closed up " K33 

With heavy eye, knit brow " 709 

departs a heavy convertite " 743 

The heavy motion that it doth " 1326 

a kind of heavy fear " 1435 

Though woe be heavy " 1574 

Though heavy sleep on sightless 

eyes Son 43 12 

But heavy tears, badges of either's 

woe " 44 14 

How heavy do I journey " 50 1 

Myheavyeyelidstothe weary night " 01 2 
And heavy ignorance aloft to fly " 78 6 
That heavy Saturn laugh'd " 9S 4 

HeaTy-han^ing— like a . . . . bell M L 1493 

Hector — bold ...., march'd to field " 14.30 

Here manly Hector faints " 1486 

Hecuba — despairing Hecuba beheld " 1447 

Lo,,here weeps Hecuba " 1485 

Hedge — Behind some hedge V A 1094 

gone to the hedge for shade PP Q 2 

He*d — Take heed, dear heart Son 95 13 

Heedful — corn o'ergrown by weeds, 

so heedful fear R L 281 

hears no heedful friends " 495 

Heedfully — heedfully dotli view " 454 

Heel — Beating his kind embrace- 

ments with her heels VA 312 

Height — His wonted height R L 776 

at height decrease Son 15 7 

by the height of happier men " 32 8 

although his height be taken " 116 8 

Heinous — Thy heinous hours wait 

on them R L 910 

one most heinous crime Son 19 8 

Heir — His tender heir miglit bear "14 
and make worms thine heir " 6 14 

beauty's successive lieir " 127 3 

Held — He held such petty bondage V A 394 

Her blood, in poor revenge, held 

it in chase R L 1736 

Held back his sorrow's tide " 1789 

of small worth held Son 2 4 
tlie frame wherein 'tis held " 24 3 
upon tliese terms I held my city L C 176 

Helen— For Helen's rape R L 1369 

On Helen's cheek all art of beauty 
set Son 53 7 

Hell— Night, image of hell R L 764 

To ugly hell ; when, lo " 1082 

torture may be call'd a hell " 1287 

effects from lightless hell " 1555 

though waiting so be hell Son 58 13 

limbecks foul as hell " 119 2 

you've pass'd a hell of time " 120 6 



Hell — the heaven that leads men to 

this hell Son 129 14 

To win me soon to hell " 144 5 

one angel in another's hell " 144 12 

From heaven to hell " 145 12 

Who art as black as hell " 147 14 

what a hell of witchcraft lies L C 288 

To win me soon to hell P P 1 5 

one angel in another's hell " 2 12 

Hell-born— Or blot with sin RL 1519 

Help — Her help she sees, but help 

she cannot get T'^4 93 

thy help I would assure thee " 371 

They buy thy help R L 913 

of time's help to despair " 983 

my case is past the help of law " 1022 

Poor helpless help " 1056 

the helj) tliat thou shall lend me " 1685 

Without thy help Son 36 4 
Your shallowest help will hold me 

up " 80 9 

the help of bath desired " 153 11 
the bath for my help lies " 153 13 

All help needing P P 18 24 

Other help for him " IS 54 

Help— It tears could help R L 1274 

Do wounds help wounds, or grief 

help grievous words " 1822 

and help to bear thy part " 1830 

Alas, she could not help it P P 16 12 

He will help thee " 21 52 

Helpless — that helpless berries saw VA 604 

what helpless shame I feel R L 756 

This helpless smoke of words " 1027 

Poor helpless help " 1056 

Hem — in this huge rondure hems Son 21 8 

Hennn'd — Since I have hemm'dthee 

here " VA 229 

hemm'd with thieves " 1022 

Hence — I pray you hence " 382 

labour hence to heave thee R L 586 

Tarquin from hence " 1276 

when he takes thee hence Son 12 14 

who doth hence remain " 39 14 

From hence your memory " 81 3 

Your name from hence " 81 5 
To make him seem long hence as 

he shows now " 101 14 

Hence, thou suborn'd informer " 125 13 

hence a question takes X C 110 

Both fire from hence " 294 

In a mutual flame from hence P T 24 

Henceforth — . ... no creature wear VA 1081 

Her — trembling in her passion " 27 

doth lend her force " 29 

Under her other was the tender boy " 32 

she with her tears " 49 

with her windy sighs " 51 

blames her miss " 53 

tires with her beak " 56 

shaking her wings " 57 

breatheth in her face " 62 

wishing her cheeks were gardens " 65 

fasten'd in her arms " 68 

she tunes her tale " 74 

Her best is better'd " 78 

by her fair immortal " 80 

he take truce with her " 82 

making her cheeks all wet " 83 



HER 



126 



HER 



Her— But when her lips VA 89 

Her help she sees " 93 

yet her fire must burn " 94 

mastering her that foil'd the god " 114 

her pleading tongue " 217 

blaze forth her wrong " 219 

cannot right her cause " 220 

her sobs do her intendments break " 222 

she shakes her head " 223 

Sometimes her arms infold him " 225 

he will not in her ai'ms " 226 

She locks her lily fingers " 228 

Her words are done, her woes the 

more " 254 

her object will away " 255 

from her twining arms " 256 

to her straight goes he " 264 

and neighs unto her " 307 

to see him woo her " 309 

embracements with her heels " 312 

With her the horse " 322 

He sees her coming " 337 

he holds her in his eye " 342 

conflict of her hue " 345 

now her cheek was pale " 347 

Her other tender hand " 352 

her soft hand's print " 353 

Her eyes petitioners to his eyes " 356 

His eyes saw her eyes " 357 

Her eyes woo'd still " 358 

her eyes did rain " 360 

engine of her thoughts " 367 

in her naked bed " 397 

His meaning struck her " 462 

Claps her pale cheeks " 468 

think to reprehend her " 470 

that can so well defend her " 472 

breatheth life in her " 474 

He wrings her nose, he strikes her 

on the cheeks " 475 

He bends her fingers, holds her 

pulses hard " 476 

He chafes her lips " 477 

He kisses her; and she, by her 

good will " 479 

so he will kiss her " 480 

Her two blue windows " 482 

her face illumined with her eye " 486 

Her arms do lend " 539 

her thirsty lips " 543 

He with her plenty " 545 

Her lips are conquerors " 549 

Her face doth reek and smoke, 

her blood doth boil " 555 

her hard embracing " 559 

prays her that he may " 578 

look well to her heart " 580 

He tells her, no " 587 

Usurps her cheek " 591 

her yoking arms " 592 

He on her belly falls, she on her 

back " 594 

Her champion mounted " 596 

He will not manage her, although 

he mount her " 598 

worse than Tantalus' is her annoy " 599 

and to lack her joy " 600 

languisheth in her mishaps " 603 

Her pleading hath " 609 



Her — obscures her silver shine VA 728 

the sun by day and her by night " 732 

bound him to her breast " 812 

Love upon her back " 814 

did feed her sight " 822 

discovery of her way " 828 

She beats her heart " 829 

repetition of her moans " 831 

Her heavy anthem " 839 

Her song was tedious " 841 

would say after her " 852 

no tidings of her love " 867 

catch her by the neck, some kiss 

her face " 872 

twine about her thigh to make 

her stay " 873 

Hasting to feed her fawn " 876 

Appals her senses aud her spirit 

confounds " 882 

Sadly in her ear " 889 

to surprise her heart " 890 

cheering up her senses " 896 

through all her sinews " 903 

which madly hurries her " 904 

bear her a thousand ways " 907 

Her more than haste " 909 

draws up her breath " 929 

Since her best work " 954 

She vail'd her eyelids " 956 

her two cheeks fair " 957 

of her bosom dropp'd " 958 

O, how her eyes " 961 

Her eyes seen in the tears, tears 

in her eye " 962 

Sighs dry her cheeks " 966 

throng her constant woe " 967 

best become her grief " 968 

pleased her babe " 974 

bids her rejoice " 977 

flatters her it is " 978 

Whereat her tears began " 979 

prison'd in her eye " 980 

which her cheek melts " 982 

Her rash suspect " 1010 

and in her haste " 1029 

on her fair delight " 1030 

her eyes as murder'd " 1031 

her eyes are fled " 1037 

cabins of her head " 1038 

her troubled brain " 1040 

once more leap her eyes " 1050 

doth she hang her head " 1058 

Her voice is stopp'd, her joints 

forget " 1061 

Her eyes are mad " 1062 

her sight dazzling " 1064 

her mangling eye " 1065 

her face with his " 1122 

by her side lay kill'd " 1165 

like a vapour from her sight " 1166 

She bows her head " 1171 

to her Adonis' breath " 1172 

within her bosom " 1173 

reft from her by death " 1174 

yokes her silver doves " 1190 

in her light chariot " 1192 

should underprop her fame R L 53 

in her fair face's field i " 72 

Now thinks he that her husband's " 78 



HER 



127 



HER 



Her — prodigal that praised her so R L 79 

hath doue her beauty wrong " 80 

welcome to her princely guest " 90 

He stories to her ears her hus- 
band's fame " 106 

Her joy with heaved-up hand " Ill 

And in her vaulty prison " 119 

To darken her whose light " 191 

I'll beg her love; but she is not 

her own " 241 

Where her beloved Collatinus lies " 256 

0, liow her fear did malre her col- 

■ our rise " 257 

' And how her hand " 260 

with her loyal fear " 261 

Which struck her sad, and then " 262 

Until her husband's welfare " 263 

had Narcissus seen her as she stood " 265 

her heavenly image sits " 288 

That eye which looks on her " 290 

The locks between her chamber " 302 

wherein her needle sticks " 317 

gazeth on her yet unstained bed " 366 

Must sell her joy, her life, her 

world's delight " 385 

Her lily hand her rosy cheek lies 

under •" 386 

her head entombed is " 390 

her other fair hand was " 393 

Her eyes, like marigolds " 397 

Her hair, like golden threads, 

play'd with her breath " 400 

Each in her sleep " 404 

Her breasts, like ivory globes " 407 

Her azure veins, her alabaster skin " 419 

Her coral lips, her snow-white 

dimpled chin " ...t: 420 

for standing by her side " 425 

On her hare breast, the heart of 

all her laud " 439 

Do tell her she is dreadfully beset " 444 

And fright her with confusion " 445 

breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes " 446 

Imagine her as one in dead of night " 449 

ugly in her eyes " 459 

remains upon her breast " 463 

May feel Iier heart " 465 

Beating her bulk " 467 

o'er the white sheet peers her 

whiter chin " 472 

at her own disgrace " 479 

his unhallow'd haste her words de- 
lays " 552 

Her sad behaviour " 556 

His ear her prayers admits " 558 

entrance to her plaining " 559 

Her pity-pleading eyes " 561 

Her modest eloquence " 563 

Which to her oratory adds " 564 

so her accent breaks " 566 

By her untimely tears, her hus- 
band's love " 570 

Till with her own white fleece her 

voice controll'd " 678 

Entombs her outcry in her lips' 

sweet fold " 679 

He pens her piteous clamours in 

her head " 681 

Her tears should drop " 686 



Her— rifled of her store RL 692 

She says, her subjects " 722 

her consecrated wall " 723 

Her immortality, and made her 

thrall " 725 

Which in her prescience " 727 

But her foresight " 728 

with her nails her flesh doth tear " 739 

And bids her eyes hereafter still 

be blind " 758 

She wakes her heart by beating 

on her breast " 759 

breathes she forth her spite " 762 

Her twinkling handmaids " 787 

to still her child " 813 

And fright her crying babe " 814 

vestal violate her oath " 883 

daughters of her daughter " 953 

scratch her wicked foe " 1035 

Kill both thyself and her " 1036 

from her be-tumbled couch " 1037 

passage of her breath " 1040 

thronging through her lips " 1041 

her nightly sorrow " 1080 

seems to point her out " 1087 

but her passion's strength " 1103 

Sometime her grief is dumb " 1105 

Make her moans mad. with their 

sweet melody " 1108 

her bark being peel'd " 1169 

Her house is sack'd, her quiet in- 
terrupted " 1170 

Her mansion batter'd " 1171 

Her sacred temple spotted " 1172 

from her bright eyes " 1213 

calls her maid " 1214 

to her mistress hies " 1215 

unto her maid seem so " 1217 

Her mistress she doth give " 1219 

to her lady's sorrow " 1221 

For why her face " 1222 

ask of her audaciously " 1223 

Why her two suns " 1224 

Nor why her fair cheeks " 1225 

Her circled eyne " 1229 

in her mistress' sky " 1230 

of her drops spilling '■ 1236 

By that her death, to do her hus- 
band wrong " 1264 

through all her body spread " 1266 

of her complaining " 1269 

Her maid is gone " 1296 

with her quill " 1297 

Throng her inventions " 1302 

the tenour of her woe " 1310 

Her certain sorrow " 1311 

Her grief, but not her grief's " 1313 

her own gross abuse " 1315 

her stain'd excuse " 1316 

feeling of her passion " 1317 

when he is by to hear her " 1318 

Of her disgrace, the better so to 

clear her " 1320 

the world might bear her " 1321 

Her letter now is seal'd " 1331 

villain court'sies to her low " 1338 

And blushing on her " 1339 

he blush'd to see her shame " 1344 

kindled her mistrust " 1352 



HER 



128 



HER 



Her— Her earnest eye R L . 


... 1356 


in her some blemish " . 


.... 1358 


That she her plaints " . 


.... 1364 


With her old eyes " 


.... 1448 


In her the painter had anatomized " 


.... 1450 


Her cheeks with chaps " 


.... 1452 


Her blue blood changed " 


.... 1454 


Lucrece spends her eyes " 


.... 1457 


And shapes her sorrow " . 


.... 1458 


answer her but cries " 


.... 1459 


to ban her cruel foes " 


.... 1460 


to lend her those " 


.... 1461 


swears he did her wrong " 


.... 1462 


To give her so much " 


.... 1463 


her beauty I may tear " 


.... 1472 


She throws her eyes " 


.... 1499 


came in her mind " 


.... 1536 


And from her tongue " 


.... 1537 


such passion her assails " 


.... 1.562 


beaten from her breast " 


.... 1563 


with her nails " 


.... 1564 


the current of her sorrow " 


.... 1569 


with her complaining " 


.... 1570 


too long with her remaining " 


.... 1572 


hath overslipp'd her thought " 


.... 1576 


of her own grief brought " 


.... 1578 


Losing her woes " 


.... 1580 


her tear-distained eye " 


.... 1586 


in her dim element " 


.... 1588 


her sad-beholding husband " 


.... 1590 


in her sad face " 


.... 1591 


Her eyes, though sod in tears " 


.... 1.592 


Her lively colour kill'd " 


.... 1593 


to ask her how she fares " 


1.594 


At last he takes her " 


1597 


she gives her sorrow fire " 


1604 


Her honour is ta'en prisoner " 


1608 


long to hear her words " 


1610 


in her watery nest " 


1011 


of her certain ending " 


1612 


Lucrece and her groom " 


1645 


Doth in her poison'd closet yet en- 




dure " 


1659 


to her imposition " 


1697 


that vet her sad task " 


1699 


Her body's stain her mind un- 




tainted clears " 


1710 


as if her heart would break " 


1716 


her poor tongue could not speak " 


1718 


in her harmless breast " 


1723 


that thence her soul unsheathed " 


1724 


Her contrite sighs " 


1727 


Her winged spright, and through 




her wounds " 


1728 


father, that beholds her bleed " 


1732 


on her self-slaughter'd body " 


1733 


Her blood, in poor revenge " 


1736 


And bubbling from her breast " 


1737 


Circles her body in " 


1739 


Some of her blood " 


1742 


to die with her " 


1776 


revenged on her death " 


1778 


The one doth call her his " 


1793 


Replies her husband " 


1796 


He weeps for her " 


1798 


I owed her, and 'tis mine " 


1803 


that should have slain her foe " 


1827 


forth her fair streets chased " 


1834 


Her wrongs to us " 


1840 



Her — To show her bleeding body R L 1851 

April of her prime Son 3 10 

her husband's shape " 9 8 ' 

carved thee for her seal " 11 13 

devour her own sweet brood " 19 2 

phoenix in her blood " 19 4 

and all her fading sweets " 19 7 

her babe from faring ill " 22 12 

and her old face new " 27 12 

WiU sourly leave her "41 8 
Hers, by thy beauty tempting her 

to thee " 41 13 

That thou hast her " 42 1 

I loved her dearly " 42 2 
Thou dost love her, because thou 

know'st I love her " 42 6 

for my sake to approve her " 42 8 

And losing her, my friend " 42 

in manners holds her still " 85 

And stops her pipe " 102 

Than when her mournful hymns " 102 

Therefore, like her I sometime " 102 

a scope to show her pride " 103 

moon hath her eclipse endured " 107 

this purpose, that her skill " 126 
Yet fear her, O thou minion of 

her pleasure " 126 

still keep, her treasure " 126 

Her audit, though delay'd " 126 

her quietus is to render thee " 126 

Her eyes so suited " 127 

more red than her lips' red " 130 

her breasts are dun " 130 

black wires grow on her head " 130 

see I in her cheeks " 130 

I love to hear her speak " 130 

Whoever hath her wish " 135 

I do believe her " 138 

her false-speaking tongue " 138 

Therefore I lie with her " 138 

Her pretty looks " 139 

One of her feather'd creatures " 143 
Sets down her babe " 143 

her neglected child holds her in 

chase " 143 

Cries to catch her " 143 

flies before her face " 143 

her poor infant's discontent " 143 

with her foul pride " 144 

languish'd for her sake " 145 

Straight in her heart " 145 

Her • love ' for whose dear love " 151 
but in her maiden hand " 154 

Storming her world L C 

Upon her head " 8 

AVhich fortified her visage " 9 

did she heave her napkin to her eyne " 15 

Sometimes her levell'd eyes " 22 

Her hair, nor loose nor tied " 

Proclaim'd in her " 

descended her sheaved hat " 

Hanging her pale and pined cheek " 
Some in her threaden fillet " 

bathed she in her fluxive eyes " 

and motives of her woe " 

sits he by her side " 

When he again desires her " 

Her grievance with his hearing " 

Which may her suifering " 



HER 



129 



HID 



Her — and made him her place L C 82 

'gainst her own content " 157 

by-past perils in her way " 158 

Which late her noble suit " 234 

To spend her living " 238 

She that her fame ' " 243 

And makes her absence valiant, 

not her might " 245 

brought me to her eye " 247 

did her force subdue " 248 

Believed her eyes " 262 

I do believe her P P 1 2 

her false-speaking tongue "17 

with her fair pride "28 

take her figured proffer " 4 10 

Then fell she on her back " 4 13 

He, spying her " 6 13 

damask dye to grace her "75 

falser to deface her "76 

Her lips to mine " 7 ' 7 

Between each kiss her oaths "78 

all her pure pretestings " 7 11 

Her faith, her oaths, her tears "■ 7 12 

than her milk-white dove "93 

Her stand she takes "95 

and left her all alone " 9 14 

Adonis sitting by her " 11 1 

god Mars did try her " 11 3 

And as he fell to her " 11 4 

clipp'd Adonis in her arms " 11 6 

And with her lips on his " 11 10 

her meaning nor her pleasure " 11 12 

And wish her lays " 15 6 

daylight with her ditty " 15 7 

Were I with her " 15 13 

That liked of her master " 16 2 

Her fancy fell a-turning " 16 4 
Where her faith was firmly fix'd " 18 11 

thou lovest her well " 19 11 

though her frowning brows " 19 13 

Her cloud)'- looks will calm " 19 14 

dissembled her delight " 19 16 

strive to try her strength " 19 19 

Her feeble force " 19 21 
When craft hath taught her thus " 19 22 
And to her will frame all thy ways " 19 25 

To hear her secrets " 19 54 

Lean'd her breast up-till a thorn " 21 10 

to hear her so complain " 21 15 

her griefs so lively shown " 21 17 

Herald— The owl, night's herald VA 531 

the herald will contrive R L 206 

herald to the gaudy spring Son 1 10 

Herald sad and trumpet be P T 3 

Heraldry — in Luerece' face R L 64 

Herb — Herbs for their smell VA 165 

herb, leaf, or weed " 1055 

Herd — to herdraen and to herds " 456 

with a herd of deer " 689 

from heat did canopy the herd Son 12 6 

And scarce the herd P P 6 2 

Herds stand weeping " 18 41 

Herdineii — toherdmenand toherds VA 456 

Here — Here come and sit " 17 

since I have hemm'd thee here " 229 

and leave me here alone " 382 

here the gentle lark " 853 

Here kennell'd in a brake " 913 

here she meets another " 917 



Here — Here overcome, as one VA 955 

here I prophesy " 1135 

Here was thy father's bed, here " 1183 

Here pale with fear R L 183 

Here with a cockatrice' dead-kill- 
ing eye " 540 

Here she exclaims against " 757 

for I have them here " 1290 

Here folds she up " 1310 

And here and there the painter 

interlaces " 1390 

Here one man's hand lean'd " 1415 

Here one being throng'd " 1417 

the fire that burneth here " 1475 

And here in Troy " 1476 

here weeps Hecuba, here Priam " 1485 

Here manly Hector faints, here 

Troilus ■ " 1486 

Here friend by friend " 1487 

Here feelingly she weeps " 1492 

Sinon here is painted " 1541 

Here all enraged, such passion " 1562 

here the hopeless merchant " 1660 

Here with a sigh " 1716 

Even here she sheathed " 1723 

which thou hast here deprived " 1752 

than you yourself here live Son 13 2 

By jsraising him here " 39 14 

But here's the joy " 42 13 

do I ensconce me here " 49 9 

I have gone here and there " 110 1 

more black and damned here L C 54 

Look here, what tributes " 197 

that is not warmed here " 292 

she touch'd him here and there P P 4 7 
Here in these brakes " 9 10 

here was the sore " 9 12 

here be it said " 19 53 

Here the anthem doth commence P T 21 

Here enclosed in cinders lie " 55 

Hereafter — hereafter shall attend VA 1136 

hereafter still be blind R L 758 

no dame hereafter living " 1714 

Herein — Herein lives wisdom, beauty Son 11 o 

Heretic — It fears not policy, that 

heretic " 124 9 

Hers — But hers, which through the 

crystal tears gave light VA 491 

Hers, by thy beauty tempting her 

to thee Son 41 13 

She showed hers ; he saw PP 9 13 

Herself— with herself at strife VA 11 

where herself herself beheld " 1129 

Means to immure herself " 1194 

Luerece shames herself to see R L 1084 

And to herself all sorrow " 1102 

So with herself is she " 1153 

made herself herself detest " 1566 

slay herself, that should have slain " 1827 

Since Rome herself in them " 1833 

beauty herself is black Son 132 18 

The destined ill she must herself 

assay L C 156 

so to herself contrives " 243 

Hid— hid in some brake VA 876 

Which in pale embers hid R L 5 

cannot be hid in clay " 609 

of many, almost hid behind " 1413 

and arm'd his long-hid wits " 1816 



HID 



130 



HIM 



Hid— hid in death's dateless niglit Son 30 6 

from Time's chest lie hid " 65 10 

Hidden— rust the treasure frets VA 767 

that hidden in thee lie Son 31 8 

Hide— broad buttock, tender hide VA 298 

thrusts into his hide Son 50 10 

Hide — liides his angrj' brow V A 339 

that hides the silver moon R L 371 

should not the greater hide " 663 

and hide their infamy " 794 

may hide them when they list " 1008 

To hide the truth " 1075 

To hide deceit and give the harm- 
less show " 1507 

Which hides your life Son 17 4 

his visage hide " 33 7 

which the robe doth hide " 62 10 

to hide my will in thine " 135 6 

to have what thou dost hide " 142 13 

Hideous — a hideous shapeless devil R L 973 

To hideous winter So7i 5 6 

Sunk in hideous night " 12 2 

Hiding — hiding base sin in plaits R L 93 

the aspiring mountains hiding " 548 

thy black all-hicUng cloak " 801 

Hiding thy bravery in their rot- 
ten smoke Son 34 4 

Hie — unto the wood they hie them V A 323 

away she hies " 1188 

to her mistress hies R L 1215 

sour-faced groom to hie as fast " 1334 

with bashful innocence doth hie " 1341 

O, sweet shepherd, hie thee P P 12 11 

Hied — hied him to the chase V A 3 

And thither hied Son 153 12 

High— high delightful plain VA 236 

and his high desire " 276 

High crest, short ears " 297 

the high wind sings " 305 

pitch the price so high " 551 

in high heaven's despite " 731 

mounts up on high " 854 

but high or low " 1139 

In that high task R L 80 

colour'd with his high estate " 92 

Collatine's high name " 108 

Huge rocks, high winds " 335 

By their high treason " 369 

by high almighty Jove " 568 

Some high, some low " 1412 

with your most high deserts Son 17 2 

the dumb on high to sing " 78 5 

As high as learning " 78 14 

better than high birth to me " 91 9 

of all size, both high and low L C 21 

Higher— the higher by this let R L 646 

To jump up higher seem'd " 1414 

HigUiiiost — But when from high- 
most pitch Son 7 9 

High-piteh'd— His thoughts R L 41 

High-proud— at such rate " 19 

Hild— O, let it not be hild " 1257 

Kill— if those hills be dry VA 233 

far oft' upon a hill " 697 

hills seem burnish'd gold " 858 

Between whose hills R L 390 

the steep-up heavenly hill Son 7 5 

From off" a hill L C 1 

■upon a steep-up hiU , P P 9 5 



Hill— That hills and valleys P P 20 3 

Hillock — Round rising hillocks VA 237 

Him — hied him to the chase " 3 

makes amain unto him " 5 

'gins to woo him " 6 

pluck him from his horse " 30 

Backward she push'd him " 41 

govern'd him in strength " 42 

resistance made him fret " 69 

Being red, she loves him " 77 

Leading him prisoner " HO 

So he were like him " iso 

gazeth she on him " 224 

infold him like a band " 225 

She answers him " ■ 308 

to see him woo her " 309 

about to take him " 319 

swiftly doth forsake him " 321 

just before him as he sat " 349 

takes him by the hand " 361 

I am bereft him so " 381 

And learn of him " 404 

can no more detain him " 577 

no longer to restrain him " 579 

Bids him farewell " 580 

in him finds missing " .... 605 

As fearful of him " 630 

let him keep his loathsome cabin " 637 

his foes pursue him still " 699 

makes him stop " 706 

bound him to her breast " 812 

after him she darts " 817 

have him seen no more " 819 

Venus salutes him " 859 

that makes him bright " 862 

doth make him shake " 880 

who shall cope him " 888 

another answer him " 922 

And, hearing him " 944 

at him should have fled ' " 947 

to strike him dead " 948 

call'd him all to nought " 993 

clepes him king of graves " 995 

Be wreak'd on him " 1004 

Tells him of trophies " 1013 

with him is beauty " 1019 

seem'd with him to bleed " 1056 

to rob him of his fair " 1086 

would not fear him " 1094 

and gently hear him " 1096 

bring him mulberries " 1103 

they him with berries " 1104 

He thought to kiss him, and hath 

killed him " 1110 

whet his teeth at him " 1113 

to persuade him there " 1114 

been tooth'd like him " 1117 

With kissing him I should have 

kUledhim " 1118 

takes him by the hand " 1124 

did him peculiar duties R L 14 

the heavens had him lent " 17 

that would let him go " 76 

that nothing in him seem'd " 94 

persuade him to abstaining . " 130 

betake him to retire " 174 

drown'd him in the flood " 266 

So cross him with their opposite 

persuasions " 286 



HIM 



131 



HIMSELF 



Him— That eye which him beliolds E L 291 

Each one by him enforced " 303 

■ to have him heard " 306 

to see him tliere " 307 

They fright him " 808 

portal yields him way " 309 

to raalce him stay " 311 

could not stay him " 323 

that did delay him " 325 

shuts liim from the heaven " 338 

Hath barr'd him " 340 

And him by oath " 410 

This moves in him " 468 

I mean to place him " 517 

Swearing I slew him, seeing thee 

embrace him " 518 

She conjures him " ..... 568 

to do him shame " 597 

by him that gave it thee " 624 

Let him return " 641 

by him defiled " 787 

reproach to him allotted " 824 

did I entertain him " 842 

could not put him back " 843 

to disdain him " 844 

he did complain him " 845 

where none may spy him " 881 

wander by him " 882 

And bring him where his suit " 898 

Lending him wit " 964 

To make him curse " 970 

AflSict him in liis bed " 975 

Let there bechance him " 976 

To make him moan " 977 

Stone him with harden'd hearts " 978 

mild women to him lose " 979 

Wilder to him " 980 

' Let him have time " 981 

Let him have time " 982 

Let him have time " 983 

Let him have time " 984 

Let him have time " 985 

Disdain to him " 987 

' Let him have time ■ " 988 

to mock at him " 989 

Let him have time " 990 

Teach me to curse him " 996 

That makes him honour'd, or be- 
gets him hate " 1005 

Revenge on him " 1180 

Which by him tainted shall for 

him be spent " 1182 

Bid him with speed " ..... 1294 
And blushing with him, wistly on 

him gazed " 1355 

did make him more amazed " 1356 

About him were a press of gaping 

faces " 1408 

that hath done him wrong " 1467 

In him the painter " 1506 

still on him she gazed " 1531 

as Priam him did cherish " 1546 

Comparing him to that " 1565 

forced him on so fast " 1676 

But ere I name him " 1688 

bids him possess his breath " 1777 

keep him from heart-easing words " 1782 

policy did him disguise " 1815 

Who, wondering at him " 1845 



Him — confounds him there Son 5 6 

to brave him " 12 14 
Him in thy course untainted do 

allow " 19 11 

to please him thou art bright " 28 9 

And dost him grace " 28 10 
Featured like him, like him with 

friends possess'd " 29 6 
hath mask'd him from me now " 33 12 
Yet him for this my love " 33 13 
To him that bears " 34 12 
let him bring forth " 38 11 
By praising him here " 39 14 
in him dost lie " 46 5 
And says in him " 46 8 
spur cannot provoke him on " 50 9 
and give him leave to go " 51 14 
Can bring him to his sweet up- 
locked treasure " 52 2 
That sin by him " 67 3 
O, him she stores " 67 13 
In him those holy antique hours 

are seen " 68 9 
And him as for a map doth Kature 

store ■ " 68 13 
Then thank him not " 79 13 
Let him but copy " 84 9 
Giving him aid " 86 8 
nightly gulls him " 86 10 
must ne'er love him " 89 14 
and leap'd with him " 98 4 
eat him up to death " 99 13 
To make him much outlive " 101 11 
To make him seem " lOi 14 
spite of him " 107 11 
Like him that travels " 109 6 
Drugs poison him " 118 14 
Of him, myself, and thee, I am for- 
saken " 133 7 
bond that him as fast doth bind " -134 8 
So him I lose " 134 12 
Him have I lost; thou hast both 

him and me " 134 13 
If that from him there may be 

aught applied L C 68 

and made hini her place " 82 

Each eye that saw him " 89 

Yet, if men moved him " 101 

by him became his deed " ill 

but were all graced by Mm " 119 

To dwell with him in thoughts " 129 

And dialogued for him " 132 

and gave him all my flower " 147 

Demand of him " 149 

Appear to him " 299 

and mine did Mm restore " .301 

In him a plenitude " 302 

She told him stories P P 4 5 

She show'd him favours "46 

she touch'd him here and there "47 
Yet not so wistly as this queen on 

Mm " 6 12 

began to woo him " 11 2 

so fell she to him " 11 4 

Other help for him " IS 54 

Bountiful they will him call " 21 40 

Quickly him they will entice " 21 44 

They that fawn'd on him before " 21 ' 49 

Himself— so .... himself forsook VA 161 



HIMSELF 



132 



HIS 



Himself— if himself were slain VA 243 

himself Affection's sentinel " 650 

To recreate himself " 1095 

Since he himself is reft " 1174 

To grow unto himself " 1180 

And for himself himself he must 

forsake R L 157 

When he himself himself con- 
founds " 160 

from himself impiety hath wrought " ■ 341 

He rouseth up himself " 541 

Self-will himself doth tire " 707 

For now against himself " 717 

hates himself for his offence " 738 

against himself to rave " 9S2 

Himself himself seek every hour 

to kill " 998 

in an armed hand ; himself behind " 1425 

Himself on her self-slaughtered 

body " 1733 

That in himself such murderous Son 9 14 

with sighs himself doth smother " 47 4 

Accompllsh'd in himself L C 116 

When as himself to singing he be- 
takes PP 8 12 
Wish'd himself the heaven's breath " 17 8 
And deny himself for Jove " 17 17 
Hind — Like a white hind under the 

gripe's sharp claws R L 543 

Hinder — Stands on his hinder legs V A 698 

Hindering — Hindering their pres- 
ent fall R L 551 

Hindmost — Though words come .... Son 85 12 

Hips — their elbows and their hips V A 44 

His — Had ta'en his last leave " 2 

And rein his proud head " 14 

on his sweating palm " 25 

him from his horse " 30 

doth slie stroke his cheek " 45 

she stops his lips " 46 

burning of his cheeks " 50 

she kiss'd his brow, his cheek, liis 

chin " 59 

in his angry eyes " 70 

From his soft bosom " 81 

did he raise his chin " 85 

ready for his pay " 89 

turns his lips another way " 90 

hath he hung his lance " 103 

His batter'd shield, his uncon- 
trolled crest " 104 

Scorning his churlish drum " 107 

Making my arms his field, his tent 

my bed " 108 

his stronger strength " Ill 

Love keeps his revels " 123 

to kiss bis shadow '' 162 

Adonis had his team " 179 

His lowering brows, o'erwhelming 

his fair sight " 183 

Souring his cheek " 185 

and then his hand " 223 

hasteth to his horse " 258 

Breaketh his rein " 264 

And now his woven girths " 266 

with his hard hoof " 267 

crusheth 'tween his teeth " 269 

His ears up-prick'd; his braided 

hanging mane " 271 



His — Upon his eompass'd crest V A 272 

His nostrils drink the air " 273 

His eye, which scornfully " 275 

Shows his hot courage and his 

high desire " 276 

what recketh he his rider's " 283 

His flattering ' Holla ' or his ' Stand, 

I say " 284 

He sees his love " 287 

with his proud sight " 288 

His art with nature's " 291 

For through his mane " 305 

He looks upon his love " 307 

as if she knew his mind " 308 

Spurns at his love " 311 

Beating his kind embracements " 312 

He vails his tail " 314 

to his melting buttock " 315 

the poor flies in his fume " 316 

His love, perceiving " 317 

his fury was assuaged " ' 318 

His testy master goeth " 319 

his boisterous and unruly " 326 

desperate in his suit " 336 

with his bonnet hides his angry 

brow " 339 

he holds her in his eye " 342 

heaveth up his hat " 351 

his fair cheek feels " 352 

His tenderer cheek " 353 

to his eyes suing . " 356 

His eyes saw her eyes " 357 

his eyes disdain'd " 358 

had his acts made jslain " 359 

he san' his love, his youth's fair fee " 393 

from his bending crest " 395 

his mouth, bis back, his breast " 396 

Who sees his true love " 397 

his glutton eye " 399 

His other agents " 400 

his proceedings teach thee " 406 

Loseth his pride " 420 

by his stealing in " 450 

which to his speech " 452 

His meaning struck her ere his 

words begun " 462 

And at his look " 463 

brake oft' his late intent " 469 

his breath breatheth " 474 

that his unkindness " 478 

when in his fresh array " 483 

upon his hairless face " 487 

Had not his clouded with his brow's 

repine " 490 

His day's hot task " 530 

lend his neck a sweet embrace " 539 

his lips obey " 549 

his lips' rich treasure " 552 

his choice is froward " 570 

nectar from his lips " 572 

in his breast " 582 

certain of his friends " 588 

she trembles at his tale " 591 

and on his neck " 592 

still hanging by his neck " 593 

On his bow-back " 619 

ever threat his foes " 620 

His eyes like glow-worms " 621 

His snout digs sepulchres " 622 



HIS 



133 



HIS 



His — wliate'er is in his way VA G23 

his crooked tushes slay " 624 

His brawny sitlcs " 625 

His short thick neck " 627 

keep his loathsome cabin " 637 

not within his danger " 639 

gentle Love in his desire " 653 

on his back doth lie " 663 

to overshoot his trouble " 680 

to amaze his foes " 684 

For there his smell " ..'... 691 

Stands on his hinder legs " 698 

To hearken if his foes " 699 

And now his grief " 701 

his weary legs doth scratch " 705 

his oil to lend the world his light " 756 

reaves his son of life " 766 

In his bed-chamber " 784 

usurp'd his name " 794 

From his moist cabinet " 854 

ariseth in his majesty " 856 

hearkens for his hounds and for 

his horn " 868 

just in his way " 879 

for his master " 914 

licking of his wound " 915 

his ill-resounding noise " 919 

volleys out his voice " 921 

to steal his breath " 934 

his breath and beauty " 935 

Seeing his beauty " 938 

with his strong course " 960 

honours to his hateful name " 994 

that his beauty may " 1011 

His victories, his triumphs, and 

his glories " 1014 

To wail his death " 1017 

in his shelly cave " 1034 

at his bloody view " 1037 

perplexed in his throne " 1043 

that his wound wept " 1053 

In his soft flank " 1054 

But stole his blood " 1056 

upon his hurt she looks " 1063 

His face seems twain " 1067 

to rob him of his fair " 1086 

he put his bonnet on " 1087 

Play with his locks " 1090 

of his tender years " 1091 

first should dry his tears " 1092 

To see his face " 1093 

wolf would leave his prey " 1097 

When he beheld his shadow " 1099 

them with his sight " 1104 

if he did see his face " 1109 

with his sharp spear " 1112 

whet his teeth at him " 1113 

nuzzling in his flank " 1115 

in his soft groin " 1116 

My youth with his " 1120 

her face with his " 1122 

looks upon his lips " 1123 

whispers in his ears " 1125 

that close his eyes " 1127 

robbed of his efiect " 1132 

not match his woe " 1140 

Sith in his prime " 1163 

And in his blood " 1167 

resembling well his pale " 1169 



His — to wet his eyes VA 1179 

was his desire " nso 

breast as in his blood " 1182 

on his keen appetite R L 9 

in that sky of his delight " 12 

treasure of his happy state " 16 

his beauteous mate " 18 

Beckoning his fortune " 19 

because it is his own " 35 

Perchance his boast " 36 

His high-pitch'd thoughts " 41 

His ail-too timeless speed " 44 

His honour, his affairs, his friends, 

his state " 45 

which in his liver glows " 47 

his traitor eye encloses '' 73 

his barren skill to show " 81 

with his high estate " 92 

wonder of his eye " 95 

so wanteth in his store " 97 

moralize his wanton sight " 104 

More than his ej'cs were open " 105 

by his manly chivalry " 109 

for his success . " 112 

the purpose of his coming hither " 113 

for his being there " 114 

in his fair welkin once appear " 116 

brought unto his bed " 120 

of his will's obtaining " 128 

to obtain his will resolving " 129 

Pawning his honour to obtain his 

lust " 156 

No comfortable star did lend his 

light " 164 

leap'd from his bed " 169 

Throwing his mantle rudely o'er 

his arm " 170 

His falchion on a flint " 176 

to his lustful eye " 179 

of his loathsome enterprise " 184 

And in his inward mind " 185 

His naked armour " 188 

his thoughts unjust " 189 

that hath engirt his marriage " 221 

to work upon his wife " 235 

And when his gaudy banner " 272 

Within his thought her heavenly 

image sets " 288 

confounds his wits " 290 

heartens up his servile powers " 295 

Stuflf up his lust " 297 

between her chamber and his will " 302 

Each one by him enforced, retires 

his ward " 303 

they all rate his ill " 304 

he still pursues his fear " 308 

The wind wars with his torch " 311 

smoke of it into his face " 312 

Extinguishing his conduct " 313 

But his hot heart " 314 

the needle his finger pricks " 319 

his course doth let " 328 

pays the hour his debt " 329 

from the heaven of his thought " 338 

That for his prey " 342 

countenance his sin " 343 

of his unfruitful prayer " 344 

That his foul thoughts might com- 
pass his fair fair " 346 



HIS 



134 



HIS 



His— liis guilty hand B L 

aud with his knee 
at the mercy of his mortal sting 
Eolling his greedy eyeballs in his 

head 
is his heart misled 
to his hand full soon 
the curtain drawn, his eyes begun 
In his clear bed 
to Tvaut his bliss 
And in his wOl his wilful eye he 

tired 
the grim lion fawneth o'er his prey 
His rage of lust 
His eye, which late 
tempts his veins 
Anon his beating heart 
His drumming heart cheers up his 

burning eye 
His eye commends the leading to 

liis hand 
His hand, as proud 
smoking with pride, march'd on 

to make his stand 
as his hand did scale 
Are by his flaming torch 
His hand, that yet remains 
his baud shakes withal 
doth his tongue begin 
to his heartless foe 
stop the headlong fury of his speed 
shakes aloft his Roman blade 
coucheth the fowl below with his 

wings' shade 
So under his insulting falchion lies 
His venom in effect 
his foul appetite 
In his dim mist 
So his uuhallow'd haste 
"While in his hold-fast foot 
feeds his vulture folly 
His ear her prayers admits, but 

his heart granteth 
wrinkles of his face 
She puts the period from his place 
That to his borrow'd bed 
He is no woodman that doth bend 

his bow 
for his sake spare me 
Hast thou put on his shape 
Thou wrong'st his honour, wound'st 

his princely name 
His true respect 
Add to his flow, but alter not his 

taste 
he sets his foot 

The wolf hath seized his prey 
Cooling his hot face 
His taste delicious 
Devours his will 
must vomit his receipt 
see his own abomination 
While Lust is in his pride 
Can curb Ms heat or rein his rash 

desire 
bankrupt beggar wails his case 
his soul's fair temple 
Leaving his spoil 
hates himself for his offence 



358 
359 
864 

368 
369 
370 
374 
382 
389 

417 
421 
424 
426 
427 
433 



436 
437 

438 
440 
448 
463 
467 
470 
471 
501 
505 

507 
509 
532 
546 
548 
552 
555 
556 

558 
562 
565 
573 

580 
582 
597 

599 
642 

651 
673 
677 
682 
699 
700 
703 
704 
705 

706 
711 
719 
733 
738 



His — chides his vanish'd loathed de- 
light RL 742 

He in his speed " 745 

His wonted height " 776 

about his golden head " 777 

his weary noon-tide prick " 781 

his smother'd light " 783 

to deck his oratory " 815 

coffers up his gold " 855 

his treasure to behold " 857 

the harvest of his wits " 859 

pleasure of his gain " 860 

cannot cure his pain " 861 

master'd by his young " 863 

Or kills his life or else his quality " 875 

where his suit may be obtained " 898 

Tarquin in his flight " 968 

his lewd eyes affright " 971 

of his committed evil " 972 

'Disturb his hours of rest " 974 

Afflict him in his bed " 975 

but pity not liis moans " 977 

to tear his curled hair " 981 

see his friends his foes " 988 

His time of folly and his time of 

sport ■ " 992 

let his unrecalling crime " 993 

the abusing of his time " 994 

At his own shadow " 997 

To shame his hope " 1003 

bathe his coal-black wings " 1Q09 

the stain upon his silver down " 1012 

father of his fruit " 1064 

laugh with his companions " 1066 

his mood with nought agrees ," 1095 

His leaves will wither and his sap 

decay " 1168 

aud as his due writ in my testament " 1183 

My shame be his " 1202 

His kindled duty " 1352 

the blood his cheeks replenish " 1357 

such sober action with his hand " 1403 

his beard all silver white " 1405 

from his lips did fly " 1406 

his sound advice " 1409 

His nose being shadow'd by his 

neighbour's ear " 1416 

That for Achilles' image stood his 

spear " 1424 

Upon his head " 1481 

Priam check'd his son's desire " 1490 

Once set on ringing, with his own 

weight goes " 1494 

His face, though full of cares " 1503 

to scorn his woes " 1505 

the painter labour'd with his skill " 1506 

ensconced his secret evil " 1515 

for his wondrous skill " 1528 

in his plain face " 1532 

Priam wets his eyes " 1548 

His eye drops fire " 1552 

clear pearls of his that move thy 

pity " 1553 

For Sinon in his fire " 1556 

to biirn his Troy " 1561 

' his wounds will not be sore " 1568 

Brings hoine his lord " 1584 

Who finds his Lucrece " 1585 

to answer his desire " 1606 



HIS 



135 



HIS 



His — his consorted lords R L 1G09 

against my heart he set liis sword " 1640 

His scarlet lust " 1650 

had purloiu'd his eyes " ]6ol 

stops his answer so " 1664 

his breath drinks up again " 1666 

that doth behold his haste " 1668 

Yet in the eddy boundeth in his 

pride " 1669 

his sighs, his sorrows " 1672 

Which speechless woe of his jsoor 

she attended " 1674 

And his untimely frenzy " 1675 

Thine, mine, his own " 16S4 

all his lordly crew " 1731 

give his sorrow place " 1773 

pale fear in his face " 1775 

possess his breath " 1777 

of his inward soul " 1779 

arrest upon his tongue " 1780 

sorrow should his use control " 1781 

through his lips do throng " 1783 

in his poor heart's aid " 1784 

But through his teeth " 1787 

Held back his sorrow's tide " 1789 

The one doth call her his, the other 

his " 1793 

to clothe his wit " 1809 

his folly's show " 1810 

his long-hid wits " 1816 

For his foul act " 1824 

he struck his hand upon his breast " 1842 

to end his vow " 1843 

And to his protestation " 1844 

did his words allow " 1845 

His tender heir might bear his 



memory 
Proving his beauty 
Of his self-love 
Lifts uiD his burning head 
to his new-appearing sight 
his sacred majesty 
in his middle age 
adore his beauty still 
on his golden pilgrimage 
From his low tract 
Shifts but his place 
to each his thunder 
is his gold complexion dimm'd 
wander'st in his shade 
A man in hue, all 'hues' in his 

controlling 
Stirr'd by a painted beauty to his 

verse 
every fair with his fair 
Who with his fear is put besides 

his part 
weakens his own heart 
you see his skill 
That has his windows 
than this his love had brought 
his for his love 
on his celestial face 
his visage hide 
To see his active child 
And in his thoughts 
cast his utmost sum 
His rider loved not speed 
thrusts into his hide 



Son 



1 


4 


2 


12 


3 


8 


7 


2 


7 


3 


7 


4 


7 


6 


7 


7 


7 


8 


7 


12 


9 


10 


14 


6 


18 


6 


18 


11 



21 


2 


21 


4 


23 


2 


23 


4 


24 


5 


24 


8 


32 


11 


32 


14 


33 


6 


33 


7 


37 


2 


47 


8 


49 


3 


50 


8 


50 


10 



His — spurring to his side 
in his fiery race 
to his sweet up-locked treasure 
unfolding his impriaon'd pride 
Nor Mars his sword 
in his former might 
,'gainst his glory fight 
now his gift confound 
for his scythe to mow 
despite his cruel hand 
have drain'd his blood 
when his youthful morn 
treasure of his spring 
His beauty shall 
hold his swift foot back 
Or who his spoil of beauty 
with his presence grace 
with his society 
imitate his clieek 
of his living hue 
since his rose is true 
no exchequer now but his 
lives upon his gains 
Thus is his cheek 
to dress his beauty 
ashes of his youth 
which is his due 
a miser and his wealth 
will steal his treasui-e 
spends all his might 
inferior far to his 
that to his subjects 
dignifies his story 
shall fame his wit 
Making his style admired 
holds his rank before 
of his great verse 
Was it his spirit 
nor his compeers 
fiU'd up his line 
hath his adjunct pleasure 
outbraves his dignity 
knife ill used doth lose his edge 
his looks translate 
For summer and his pleasures wait 

on thee 
April dress'd in all his trim 
And to his robbery 
But, for his theft, in pride of all 

his growth 
So thou prevent'st his scythe 
with his colour fix'd 
Steal from his figure 
for aye his page 
Doth part his function 
Of his quick objects 
Nor his own vision 
objects to his beams assemble 
what with his gust is 'greeing 
And to his palate 
although his height be taken 
Within his bending pickle's compass 
with his brief hours 
Till each to razed oblivion yield 

his part 
Time's fickle glass, his sickle, hour 
let my heart be his guard 
addeth to his store 
Wooing his purity 



Son 50 


12 


" 51 


11 


" 52 


2 


" 52 


12 


" 55 


7 


" 56 


4 


" 60 


7 


" 60 


8 


" 60 


12 


" 60 


14 


" 63 


3 


" 63 


4 


" 63 


8 


" 63 


13 


" 65 


11 


" 65 


12 


" 67 


2 


" 67 


4 


" 67 


5 


" 67 


6 


" 67 


8 


" 67 


11 


" 67 


12 


" 68 


1 


" 68 


12 


" 73 


10 


" 74 


7 


" 75 


4 


" 75 


6 


" 80 


3 


" SO 


7 


" 84 


6 


" 84 


8 


" 84 


11 


" 84 


12 


" 85 


12 


" 86 


1 


" 86 


5 


" 86 


7 


" 86 


13 


" 91 


5 


" 94 


12 


" 95 


14 


" 96 


10 


" 97 


11 


" 98 


2 


" 99 


11 


" 99 


12 


" 100 


14 


" 101 


6 


" 104 


10 


" 108 


12 


" 113 


3 


" 113 


7 


" 113 


8 


" 114 


8 


" 114 


11 


" 114 


12 


" 116 


8 


" 116 


10 


" 116 


11 


" 122 


7 


" 126 


2 


" 133 


11 


" 135 


10 


" 144 


s 



HIS 



136 



HOLY 



His— Angry that his prescriptions Son 147 


6 


As his triumphant prize " 


151 


10 


laid by his brand " 


153 


1 


And his love-kindling fire " 


153 


3 


Laid by his side his heart-inflam- 






ing brand " 


154 


2 


man that grazed his cattle L C 




57 


upon his grained bat " 




64 


with his hearing to divide " 




67 


eyes stuck over all his face " 




81 


And when in his fair parts " 




83 


His browny locks did hang " 




85 


Upon his lips their silken parcels " 




87 


For on his visage " 




90 


' Small show of man was yet upon 






his chin " 




92 


His phoenix down began " 




93 


Yet show'd his visage " 




96 


His qualities were beauteous as 






his form " 




99 


His rudeness so with his author- 






ized youth " 




104 


"That horse his mettle from his 






rider takes " 




107 


by him became his deed " 




111 


Or he his manage " 




112 


His real habitude gave life " 




114 


in himself, not in his case " 




116 


Pieced not his grace " 




119 


of his subduing tongue " 




120 


For his advantage still " 




123 


in his craft of will " 




126 


that did his picture get " 




134 


that never touch'd his hand " 





141 


mistress of his heart " 




142 


with his art in youth " 




145 


in his charmed power " 




146 


and his amorous spoil " 




154 


of his foul beguiling " 




170 


Heard where his plants " 




171 


gilded in his smiling " 




172 


Of his foul adulterate heart " 




175 


commanding in his monarchy " 




196 


his invised properties " 




212 


' This said, his watery eyes " 




281 


' For, 1-0, his passion " 




295 


His poison'd me, and mine did 






him restore " 




301 


which in his level came " 




309 


of his all-hurting aim " 




310 


moisture of his eye " 




323 


in his cheek so glow'd " 




324 


from his heart did fly " 




325 


his spongy lungs bestow'd " 




326 


Wooing his purity P P 


2 


8 


stories to delight his ear " 


4 


5 


favours to allure his eye " 


4 


6 


To win his heart " 


4 


7 


Study his bias leaves, and makes 






his book thine eyes " 


5 


5 


thy voice his dreadful thunder " 


5 


11 


used to cool his spleen " 


6 


6 


For-his approach " 


6 


8 


and throws his mantle by " 


6 


9 


And with her lips on his " 


11 


10 


Heart hath his hope " 


15 


10 


farewell his great renown " 


21 


48 


Use his company no more " 


21 


50 


Lest the requiem lack his right P T 




16 



His— 'Twixt the turtle and his queen PT 31 

That the turtle saw his right " 34 

Hiss — where never serpent hisses VA 17 

and the wind doth hiss you " 1084 

The adder hisses BL 871 

History — the false heart's history Son 93 7 

Hit — at random dost thou hit VA 940 

tender horns being hit " 1033 

how hard true sorrow hits Son 120 10 

Hither — the purpose of his coming 

hither ' PL 113 

Post hither, this vile purpose " 220 

Go, get me hither paper " 1289 

Hive — In thy weak hive " 839 

the young possess their hive " 1769 

a platted hive of straw L C 8 

Hoard — She hoards, to spend £ L 1318 

that I hoard them not L C 220 

Hoarsely — she calls her maid R L 1214 

Hoisted — That I have hoisted sail Son 117 7 

Hold— hold up thy head VA 118 

he holds her in his eye " 342 

holds her pulses hard " 476 

will hold thee in disdain " 761 

and hold it for no sin P L 209 

holds he disputation " 246 

To hold their cursed-blessed fortune " 866 

Holds disputation with each thing " 1101 

Lest he should hold it " 1315 

These contraries such unity do 

hold " 1558 

which you hold in lease Son 13 5 

Holds in perfection " 15 2 

shall beauty hold a plea " 65 3 

honey breath hold out " 65 5 

can hold his swift foot back " 65 11 

I hold such strife " 75 3 

will hold me up afloat " 80 9 

in manners holds her still " 85 1 

holds his rank before " 85 12 

For how do I hold thee " 87 5 

I sometime hold my tongue " 102 13 

holds what it doth catch " 113 8 

could not so much hold " 122 9 

Dost hold Time's fickle glass " 12G 2 
For nothing hold me, so it please 

thee hold " 136 11 

child holds her in chase " 143 5 

No want of conscience holds it " 151 13 

could not hold argument P P 3 2 

never faith could hold "52 
Hold-fiist— WhUe in his hold-fast 

foot P L 555 

Holding — Holding their course to 

Paphos VA 1193 

who, holding Lucrece' life P L 1805 

Hole— To fill with worm-holes " 946 

1 make some hole " 1175 

through loop-holes thrust " 1383 

Holiest— sanctified of holiest note L C 233 

Holla— His flattering ' Holla VA 284 

Holloa— hears some huntsman holloa '• 973 

Hollow — Love made those hollows " 243 

Whose hollow womb " 268 

Lo, in this hollow cradle " 1185 

HoUow-swcllins — hollow-swelling 

feather'd breasts R L 1122 

Holy — By holy human law " 571 

breach of holy wedlock vow " 809 



HOLY 



137 



HOT 



Holy — a holy and obsequious tear Son 31 5 
those holy antique hours " 68 9 

no name, no holy bower " 127 7 

this holy Are of Love " 153 5 

of my holy vows afraid L C 179 

^here is no heaven, by holy then PP 19 45 

Holy-thouglited — And .... Lucrece R L 384 

Hoinag'e— homage to his new-appear- 
ing sight Son 7 3 

Home — ere rich at home he lands R L 336 

Brings home his lord " 1584 

Met far from home " 1596 

So far from home Son 61 6 

Comes home again " 87 12 

That is my home of love " 109 5 

Home-bred — than civil .... strife V A 764 

Homely— The villain court'sies R L 1338 

Homeward — Homeward through the 

dark lawnd VA 813 

Honest — But honest fear, bewitch'd R L 173 

Pawn'd honest looks " 1351 

And all my honest faith Son 152 8 

Honesty — Thou smother'st honesty R L 885 

With outward honesty " 1545 

Honey — A thousand honey secrets V A 16 

did honey passage yield " 452 

The honey fee of parting " 538 

I think the honey guarded R L 493 

My honey lost, and I " 836 

And suck'd the honey " 840 

Thy honey turns to gall " 889 

summer's honey breath Son 65 5 

Honour — pure blush and honour's 

wrack V A 558 

Now she adds honours " 994 

Honour and beauty RL 27 

His honour, his affairs " 45 

With honour, wealth, and ease " 142 

As life for honour " 145 

Honour for wealth " 146 

Pawning his honour " 156 

To kill thine honour " 516 

And stoop to honour " 574 

Thou wrong'st his honour " 599 

thine honour lay in me " 834 

of thy honour's wrack " 841 

Yet for thy honour " 842 

Honour thyself to rid me " 1031 

my honour lives in thee " 1032 

My honour I'll bequeath " 1184 

'Tis honour to deprive " 1186 

mine honour is new-born " 1190 

Mine honour be the knife's " 1201 

Her honour is ta'en prisoner " 1608 

My low-declined honour " 1705 

in honour might uphold Son 13 10 
Of public honour and proud titles " 25 2 
in that I honour most " 25 4 
Is from the book of honour " 25 11 
with public kindness honour me " 36 11 
that honour from thy name " 36 12 
gilded honour shamefully misplaced" 66 5 
Finding myself in honour so for- 
bid L C 150 

I mine honour shielded " 151 

Honourable — plight your honour- 
able faiths R L 1690 

Honoured — by oath they truly ... . " 410 

that makes him honour'd " 1005 



Honouring — the outward honouring Son 125 2 

Hoof— with his hard hoof T'.4 267 

Hoof d — Round-hoof'd, short-jointed " 295 

Hook— nor fear'd no hooks R L 103 

hast thou forged hooks Son 1.37 7 

Hope — Things out of hope VA 567 

so fair a hope is slain " 762 

This sound of hope " 976 

Despair, and hope " 988 

weak-built hopes persuade him R L 130 

Full of foul hope " 284 

If in thy hope thou darest " 605 

To shame his hope " 1003 

When their brave hope " 1430 

And to their hope " 1433 

one more rich in hope Son 29 5 

in hope my verse sliall stand " 60 13 

But hope of orphans " 97 10 

fears to hopes and hopes to fears •' 119 3 

But if thou catch thy hope " 143 11 

Heart hath his hope P P 15 10 

^ope— But that I hope Son 26 7 

being lack'd, to hope " 52 14 

Hopeless — a hopeless castaway RL 744 

hopeless merchant of this loss " 1660 

Hoping— Thus hoping that Adonis VA 1009 

And so by hoping more R L 137 

Horn — forhis hounds and for his ... . VA 868 

she hears a merry horn " 1025 

whose tender horns being hit " 1033 

comes with horn and hounds P P 9 6 

Horse — to pluck him from his horse V A 30 

and hasteth to his horse " 258 

So did this horse excel " 293 

Look, what a horse should have " 299 

. With her the horse " 322 

my horse is gone " 380 

though thy horse be gone " 390 

on thy well-breath'd horse " 678 

Sin's pack-horse, virtue's snare R L 928 

Then can no horse Son 51 9 

Some in their horse " 91 4 

than hawks or horses be " 91 11 
" That horse his mettle from his 

rider takes L C ..... 107 

Whether the horse by him " Ill 

Hospitality — Reward not .... R L 575 

Host — leaves the Eoman host " 3 

To all the host of heaven " 598 

Hostess — A woeful hostess brooks 

not merry guests " 1125 

Hot — hot as coals of glowing fire V A 35 

Shows his hot courage " 276 

His day's hot task " 530 

Hot, faint and weary " 559 

for the hot encounter " 596 

The hot scent-snuffing hounds " 692 

Which the hot tyrant stains " 797 

drops of hot desire " 1074 

But his hot heart R L 314 

Gives the hot charge " 434 

Cooling his hot face " 682 

This hot desire converts to cold 

disdain " 691 

Sometime too hot Son 18 5 

in three hot Junes burn'd " 104 7 

the general of hot desire " 154 7 

these trophies of affections hot L C 218 

cold modesty, hot wrath " 293 



HOT 



138 



HOW 



HotH-Hot was the day PP 6 7 
Youth is hot and bold " 12 7 
Hot-burning — conscience and hot- 
burning will R L 247 

hot-burning fire doth dwell " 1557 

Hotly— did hotly overlook VA 178 

Burneth more hotly ' " 332 

accomplishment so hotly chased RL 716 

Hotter— she hotter that did look P P 6 7 

Hound — keep with thy hounds VA 678 

To make the cunning bounds " 686 

hot scent-snuifing hounds " 692 

She hearkens for his hounds " 868 

the hounds are at a bay " 877 

yelping of the hounds " 881 

in a brake she finds a hound " 913 

full-fed hound or gorged hawk R L 694 

Some in their hawks and hounds Son 91 4 

comes with horn and hounds P P 9 6 

Hour — an hour but short V A 23 

What hour is this " 495 

And in a peaceful hour " 652 

For lovers' hours are long " 842 

one minute in an hour " 1187 

as minutes fill up hours R L 297 

pays the hour his debt " 329 

stand auspicious to the hour " 347 

slavish wipe or birth-hour's blot " 537 

an hour great strifes to end " 899 

Thy heinous hours wait " 910 

the hours thou gavest me " 933 

proud buildings with thy hours " 944 

wouldst thou one hour come back " 965 

Disturb his hours of rest " 974 

seek every hour to kill " 998 

in that sad hour of mine " 1179 

Those hours that with gentle work (Soft 5 1 

on the top of happy hours " 16 5 

O, carve not with thy hours " 19 9 

he was but one hour mine " 33 11 

sweet hours from love's delight " 36 8 

he will not every hour survey " 52 3 

Upon the hours and times " 57 2 

the world-without-end hour " 57 5 

the account of hours to crave " 58 3 

shames and idle hours iu me " 61 7 

When hours have drain'd his blood " 63 3 

those holy antique hours " 68 9 

with his brief hours and weeks " 116 11 

on leases of short-number'd hours " 124 10 

Time's fickle glass, his sickle, hour " 126 2 

in selling hours of dross " 146 11 

The swiftest hours L C 60 

of many a blasting hour " 72 

dead within an hour P P 13 6 

minutes added to the hours " 15 14 

Hourly — which stop the hourly dial P i 327 

House — Her house is sack'd " 1170 

from our house in grief " 1308 

so fair a house Son 13 9 

Household — to my household's grave P£ 198 

Housewife — Lo, as a careful .... Son 143 1 

Hover'd — cherubin above them . ..! L C 319 

Hovering — First .... o'er the paper R L 1297 

How — O, how quick is love VA 38 

Look, how a bird lies " 67 

Look how he can " 79 

how want of love tormenteth " 202 

how doth she now for wits " 249 



How — how he is enraged VA 317 

How she came stealing " 344 

How white and red " 346 

how to get my palfrey " 384 

How like a jade he stood " 391 

How he outruns the wind " 681 

Look, how a bright star " 815 

How love makes young men " 837 

How love is wise in folly " 838 

how the world's poor people " 925 

O, how her eyes and tears " 961 

how strange it seems " 985 

how much a fool was I " 1015 

how fondly I did dote R L 207 

O, how her fear did make " 257 

And how her hand " 260 

How can they then assist " 350 

' How will thy shame " 603 

how canst thou fulfil " 628 

how vile a spectacle " 631 

how are they wrapp'd in " 636 

princess how she fares " 721 

eyes have never practised how " 748 

that knew not how " 810 

How Tarquin wronged me " 819 

How he in peace is wounded " 831 

Alas, how many bear " 832 

How comes it then " 895 

mark how slow time goes " 990 

and how swift and short " 991 

How Tarquin must be used " 1195 

How was I overseen " 1206 

how listening Priam " 1548 

time how slow it creeps " 1575 

ask her how she fares " 1594 

O, teach me how to make " 1653 

How may this forced stain " 1701 

How much more praise Son 2 9 

Then how, when nature calls me " 4 11 

Mark how one string "89 

How can I then " 22 8 

boast how I do love " 20 13 

How can I then return " 28 1 

How far I toil " 28 8 

How many a holy " 31 5 

How can my Muse " 38 1 

O, how thy worth " 39 1 

teachest how to make " 39 13 

How would thy shadow's form " 43 6 

How would, I say " 43 9 

How to divide the conquest " 46 2 

How careful was I " 43 1 

How heavy do I journey " 50 1 

O, how much more doth beauty " 54 1 

how hapi^y you make those " 57 12 

how are our brains beguiled " 59 2 

How with this rage " 65 3 

O, how shall summer's honey breath " 65 5 

how thy beauties wear " 71 1 

how thy precious minutes " 77 2 

O, how I faint " 80 1 

How far a modern quill " 83 7 

For how do I hold thee " 87 5 

How like Eve's apple " 93 13 

How sweet and lovely " 95 1 

How many lambs might " 96 9 

How many gazers might'st thou " 96 11 
How like a winter has my absence 

been " 97 1 



HOW 



139 



How— I teacli thee how Son 101 13 

Mark how with my neglect " 112 12 

How have mine eyes " 119 7 

To weigh how once I suffer'd " 120 8 

how hard true sorrow hits " 120 10 

How oft, when thou " 128 1 
How can it? O, how can Love's 

eye " 148 9 

taught thee how to malce " 150 9 

Saw how deceits were gilded L C 172 

By how much of me " 189 

How mighty then you are " 253 

How coldly those impediments " 2G9 

O, how the channel " 285 

how shall I swear to love P P 5 1 

how often hath she joined "■ 1 1 

How many tales to please me "79 

how god Mars did try her " 11 3 

Lord, how mine eyes " 15 1 

How sighs resound " 18 34 

How true a twain P T 45 

Howling— and he replies with V A 918 

In howling wise, to see my dole- 
ful plight P P 18 33 

Hue — conflict of her hue V A 345 

a -whiter hue than wliite " 398 

savour, hue and qualities " 747 

A man in hue, all ' hues Son 20 7 

fair in knowledge as in hue " 82 5 

flowers in odour and in hue " 98 6 

seeing of his living hue " 67 6 

So your sweet hue " 104 11 

■which their hue encloses L C 287 

Hiied — The heaven-hued sapphire " 215 

Huge— Huge rocks, high winds R L 335 

huge fires abide " 647 

And waste huge stones " 959 

That this Iiuge stage presenteth Son 15 3 

in this huge rondure hems " 21 8 

Hugely — alone stands hugely politic " 124 11 

Hum — For burden-wise I'll hum R L 1133 

Human— By holy human law " 571 

doth ravish human sense P P & 6 

Humanity — Let fair .... abhor R L 195 

Humble — the .... suppliant's friend " 897 

An humble gait, calm looks " 1508 

The humble as the proudest Son 80 6 

The humble salve " 120 12 

And in thy suit be humble true P P 19 32 

Humbly — she doth insinuate VA 1012 

Humour — Soothing the humour " 850 

Such childish humour R L 1825 

And every humour hath Son 91 5 

on thy humour doth depend " 92 8 

Hundred — What is ten .... touches VA 519 

twenty hundred kisses " 522 

five hundred courses of the sun Son 59 6 

Hung — hath he hung his lance VA 103 

a jewel hung in ghastly night Son 27 11 

Hung with the trophies " 31 10 

Hunger — Sharp. . . . by the conquest P L 422 

Hungry — I have seen the .... ocean Son 64 5 

Thy hungry eyes even till " 56 6 

Hunt— To hunt the boar VA 588 

thou wouldst hunt the boar " 614 

if thou needs wilt hunt " 673 

Why hunt I then for colour R L 267 

Hunted— Spied the hunted boar VA 900 

Past reason hunted Son 129 6 



Hunting — Hunting he loved VA 4 

the hunting of the boar " 711 

Huntsman— she hears some .... " 973 

Hurl — their silken parcels hurls L C 87 

Hurry— Which madly hurries her VA 904 

Hurt— You hurt my hand " 421 

To mend the hurt " 478 

Upon his hurt she looks " 1063 

They that have power to hurt Son 94 1 

Hurting — his ^11-hurting aim L C 310 

Husband — her husband's shallow 

tongue RZ 78 

to her ears her husband's fame " 106 

Until her husband's welfare " 263 

So thy surviving husband " 519 

Then, for thy husband " 533 

her husband's love " 570 

' My husband is thy friend " 582 

husband, do thou take " 1200 

to do her husband wrong " 1264 

One of my husband's men " 1291 

Shed for the slaughter'd husband " 1376 

her sad-beholding husband " 1590 

Dear husband, in the interest " 1619 

Eeplies her husband " 1796 

sweet husband to another Son 8 9 

her husband's shape in mind "98 

Like a deceived husband " 93 2 

Husband — And .... nature's riches " 94 6 

Husbandry- the tillage of thy " 3 6 

Which husbandry in honour " 13 10 

Hnsli — mournful hymns did hush " 102 10 

Husli'd — Even as the wind is hush'd VA 458 

Hymns— sings at heaven's gate Son 29 12 

To every hymn " 85 7 

her mournful hymns did hush " 102 10 

I— but a kiss I beg VA 96 

I have been woo'd, as I entreat " 97 

overruled I oversway'd " 109 

And I will wink " 122 

were I hard-favour'd " 133 

then I were not for thee " 137 

I will enchant thine ear " 145 

■whereon I lie " 151 

even where I list to sport me " 154 

I must remove " 186 

And, lo, I lie " 194 

The heat I have " 195 

And were I not immortal " 197 

What am I, that thou " 205 

I have hemm'd thee here " 229 

I am such a park " 239 

And this I do " 281 

'Stand, I say " 284 

thou wert as I am, and I a man " 369 

I would assure thee " 371 

I never shall regard " 377 

I am bereft him so " 381 

I pray you hence " .382 

I heartily beseech thee " 404 

Though I were dumb " 406 

' I know not love " 409 

and then I chase it " 410 

and I will not owe it " 411 

For I have heard it is " 413 

or I had no hearing " 423 

I had my load before " 430 

Had I no eyes " 433 



140 



— Or "were I deaf VA 4'i5 

should I be in love " 438 

And that I could uot see " 440 

'0, where am I?' quoth she " 493 

Do I delight to die " 496 

But now I lived " 497 

But now I died " 498 

bargains may I make " 512 

I can be well contented " 513 

Before I know mj^self " 525 

I fear'd thy fortune " 642 

Grew I not faint? and fell I not 

downright " 645 

if I love thee, I thy death should 

fear " 660 

What should I do " 667 

I prophesy thy death " 671 

' Where did I leave " 715 

' I am,' quoth he " 718 

going I shall fall • " 719 

I perceive the reason " 727 

The kiss I gave yoa " 771 

that I cannot reprove " 787 

I hate not love " 789 

More I could tell, but more I dare 

not " 805 

now I will away " 807 

Death, I did but jest " 997 

I felt a kind of fear " 998 

as I met the boar " 999 

truth I must confess " 1001 

I rail'd on thee " 1002 

I did but act " 1006 

how much a fool was I " 1015 

So shall I die " 1074 

why then I know " 1109 

Had I been tooth'd like him, I 

must confess " 1117 

more am I accurst " 1120 

here I prophesy " 1135 

Wherein I will not kiss " 1188 

I enforced this fire JR L 181- 

So Lucrece must I force " 182 

'Yea, though I die " 204 

how fondly I did dote " 207 

that I their father had not been " 210 

' What win I, if I gain the thing 

I seek " 211 

Why hunt I then " 267 

quoth he, ' I must deflower " 348 

to whom I pray " 349 

am I come to scale " 481 

'Thus I forestall thee " 484 

Which I to conquer sought " 488 

' I see what crosses " 491 

1 know what thorns " 492 

I think the honey guarded " 493 

I have debated " 498 

what sorrow I shall breed " 499 

I know repentant tears " 502 

yet strive I to embrace " 504 

I must enjoy thee " 512 

I purpose to destroy thee " 514 

I mean to place him " 517 

Swearing I slew him " 518 

I rest thy secret friend " 526 

I did entertain thee " 596 

I complain me " 598 

I sue for exiled majesty's repeal " 640 



—I will not hear thee B L 667 

I mean to bear thee " 670 

shame I feel " 756 

So should I have " 789 

' Where now I have no one " 792 

But I alone alone must sit " 795 

Tarquin wronged me, I Collatine " 819 

As I, ere this, was pure " 826 

and I, a drone-like bee " 836 

' Yet am I guilty " 841 

did I entertain him " 842 

I could uot put him back " 843 

1 could prevent this storm " 966 

I force uot argument " 1021 

In vain I rail " 1023 

In vain I cavil " 1025 

In vain I spurn " 1026 

For if I die " 1032 

But if I live " 1033 

I live and seek in vain " 1044 

I fear'd by Tarquiu's falchion " 1046 

But when I fear'd I was a loyal wife " 1048 

So am I now " 1049 

for which I sought to live " 1051 

I need not fear to die " 1052 

at least I give " 1053 

I will uot wrong thy true affec- 
tion so " 1060 

I am the mistress " 1069 

' I will not poison thee " 1072 

I will uot paint " 1074 

I at each sad strain will strain a 

tear " 1131 

woes waking, wretched I " 1136 

I make some hole " 1175 

Through which I may convey " 1176 

' Yet die I will not " 1177 

I murder shameful scorn " 1189 

dear jewel I have lost " 1191 

shall I bequeath to thee " 1192 

abridgement of my will I make " 1198 

How was I overseen " 1206 

' Madam, ere I was up " .....1277 

I thus far can dispense " 1279 

And ere I rose . " 1281 

than I can well express " 1286 

for I have them here " 1290 

What should I say " 1291 

So, I commend me " 1308 

her beauty I may tear " 1472 

' It cannot be, I find " 1539 

So did I Tarquin " 1547 

I will inflict " 1630 

And swear I found you " 1635 

I did begin to start " 1639 

I took all patiently " 1641 

I should uot live " 1642 

when I might charm " 1681 

'But ere I name him " 1688 

And why not I " 1708 

Where shall I live " 1754 

I often did behold " 1758 

That I no more can see what once 

I was " 1764 

' I did give that life " 1800 

I owed her " 1803 

that I may change my mind Son 10 9 

When I do count the clock " 12 1 

When I behold the violet " 12 3 



141 



I — lofty trees I see barren of leaves Son 12 

do I question make " 12 

do I my judgement pluck " 14 

I have astronomy " 14 
Nor can I fortune to brief minutes 

tell " 14 

that I in heaven find " 14 

my knowledge I derive " 14 

in them I read such art " 14 

I prognosticate " 14 

When I consider everj' thing " 15 

When I perceive that men " 15 

I engraft you new " 15 

If I could write " 17 

Shall I compare thee " 18 

But I forbid thee one " 19 

I will not praise " 21 

persuade me I anr old " 22 

time's furrows I behold " 22 

Then look I death " 22 

How can I then be elder " 22 
As I, not for myself, but for thee 

will " 22 

•which I will keep so chary " 22 

So I, for fear of trust, forget to say " 23 

Whilst I, whom fortune / '• 25 

. in that I honour most " 25 

Then happy I that love " 25 

Where I may not remove " 25 

To thee I send this " 2() 

But that I hope some good " 26 
Then may I dare to boast how I 

do love thee " 26 

I haste me to my bed " 27 

from far where I abide " 27 

How can I then return " 28 

' How far I toil " 28 

I tell the day " 28 
flatter I the swart-complexion'd 

night " 28 

I all alone beweep " 29 

With what I most enjoy " 29 

Haply I think on thee " 29 

then I scorn to change " 29 

I summon up remembrance " 30 
I sigh the lack of many a thing I 

sought " 30 

Then can I drown an eye " 30 

Then can I grieve " 30 

Which I new pay " 30 

the while I think on thee " 30 
Which I by lacking have supposed 

dead " 31 

which I thought buried " 31 

images I loved I view in thee " 31 

a glorious morning have I seen " 33 

I have still the loss " 34 

and even I in this " 35 

fault I bring in sense " 35 

That I an accessary needs must be " 35 

I may not evermore acknowledge " 36 

I love thee in such sort " 36 ■ 

So I, made lame by fortune " 37 

I make my love engrafted " 37 

So then I am not lame " 37 

That I in thy abundance am sufficed " 37 

that best I wish in thee " 37 

This wish I have " 37 

manners may I sing " 39 



I — when I praise thee Son 

by this separation I may give " 

I cannot blame thee " 

I do forgive thy robbery " 

When I am sometime absent " 

thus I will excuse ye " 

thou know'st I love her " 

If I lose thee " 

and I lose both twain " 

my friend and I are one " 

AVhen most I wink " 

But when I sleep " 

How would, I say, my eyes " 

to see till I see thee " 

I would be brought " 

that I am not thought " 

I must attend time's leisure " 

wherever I abide " 

This told, I Joy " 

I send them back again " 

And I am still with them " 
How careful was I, when I took 

my way " 

Thee have I not lock'd up " 

though I feel thou art " 

thou wilt be stol'n, I fear " 

When I shall see thee frown " 

do I ensconce me hex-e " 

I can allege no cause " 

How heavy do I journey " 

When what I seek " 

from thee I speed " 

should I haste me thence " 

Till I return " 

Then should I spur " 

motion shall I know " 

So am I as the rich " 

what should I do but tend " 

I have no precious time " 

Nor dare I chide " 
Whilst I, my sovereign, watch the 

clock " 

Nor dare I question " 

I should in thought control " 

I am to wait " 

That I might see " 

0, sure I am " 

For thee watch I " 

As I all other " 

quite contrary I read " 

that for myself I praise " 

shall be, as I am now , " 

do I now fortify " 

When I have seen by Time's " 

towers I see down-razed " 

When I have seen the hungry " 

When I have seen such " 

for restfvil death I cry " 

from these would I be gone " 

I leave my love alone " 

for me when I am dead " 

world that I am fled " 

for I love you so " 

That I in your sweet thoughts " 

O, if, I Say, you look " 
When I perhaps compounded am 

with clay " 

with me after I am gone " 

praise upon deceased I " 



39 


4 


39 


7 


40 


6 


40 


9 


41 


2 


42 


5 


42 


6 


42 


9 


42 


11 


42 


13 


43 


1 


43 


3 


43 


9 


43 


13 


44 


3 


44 


9 


44 


12 


45 


2 


45 


13 


45 


14 


47 


12 


48 


1 


48 


9 


48 


10 


48 


13 


49 


2 


49 


9 


49 


14 


50 


1 


50 


2 


51 


2 


51 


3 


51 


4 


51 


7 


51 


8 


52 


1 


57 


1 


57 


3 


57 


5 


57 


6 


57 


9 


58 


2 


58 


13 


59 


9 


59 


13 


61 


13 


62 


8 


62 


11 


62 


13 


63 


1 


63 


9 


64 


1 


64 


3 


64 


5 


64 


9 


66 


1 


66 


13 


66 


14 


71 


1 


71 


3 


71 


6 


71 


7 


71 


9 


71 


10 


71 


14 


72 


7 



142 



I — For I am shamed by that which 

I bring forth Son 

I hold such strife " 

Thus do I pine " 

do I not glance aside " 

AVhy write I still all one " 

I always write of you " 

' So oft have I invoked thee " 

of that which I compile " 

Whilst I alone did call " 

I grant, sweet love " 
0, how I faint when I of you do 

write " 

I am a worthless boat " 

and I be cast away " 
Or I shall live your epitaph to 

make " 

when I in earth am rotten " 
Though I, once gone, to all the 

world must die " 

I grant thou wert " 

I never saw that you " 

I found or thought I found " 

have I slept in your report " 

For I impair not beauty " 

I think good thoughts " 

I say ' 'Tis so, 'tis true " 

I was not sick " 

Then lack'd I matter " 

For how do I hold thee " 

Thus have I had thee " 

I can set down a story " 

wherein I am attainted " 

And I by this will be " 

that to myself I do " 

to thee I so belong " 

And I will comment " 

and I straight will halt " 

I will acquaintance strangle " 
Lest I, too much profane, should 

do it wrong " 

For I must ne'er love him " 

so shall I taste " 

I better in one general best " 

of all men's pride I boast " 

need I not to fear " 

I see a better state " 

happy title do I find " 

and yet I know it not " 

So shall I live " 

I cannot know thy change " 

I love thee in such sort " 

What freezings have I felt " 

have I been absent " 

Nor did I wonder " 

I with these did play " 

violet thus did I chide " 

The lily I condemned " 
More flowers I noted, yet I none 

could see " 

I teach thee how " 

I love not less " 

When I was wont to greet it " 

I sometime hold my tongue " 

Because I would not dull you " 

if I no more can write " 

first your eye I eyed " 

of the seasons have I seen " 

Since first I saw you fresh " 



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8 



I — I see descriptions Son 

I see their antique pen " 

I'll live in this poor rhyme " 

I must each day say o'er " 

thou mine, I thine " 

I hallow'd thy fair name " 

that I was false of heart " 

might I from myself depart " 

if I have ranged " 

I return again " 

wide universe I call " 

I have gone here and there " 

that I have look'd on truth " 

I never more will grind " 

to whom I am confined " 

and wish I were renew'd " 
like a willing patient, I will drink " 

that I will bitter think " 

and I assure ye " 

For what care I who calls " 

and I must strive " 

nor I to none alive " 
In so profound abysm I throw all 

care " 

my neglect I do dispense " 

Since I left you " 

Or whether shall I say " 
Those lines that I before have writ " 

I could not love you dearer " 
Might I not then say, ' Now I love 

you best " 

When I was certain " 

then might I not say so " 

I never writ " 

that I have scanted all " 
I should your great deserts repay " 

That I have frequent been " 

That I have hoisted sail " 

says I did strive to prove " 

did I frame my feeding " 

But thence I learn " 

What potions have I drunk " 

when I saw myself to win " 

now I find true " 

So I return rebuked " 

more than I have spent " 

which I then did feel " 

I under my transgression bow " 

As I by yours, you've pass'd " 
And I, a tyrant, have no leisure 

taken " 

once I suflfer'd in your crime " 

count bad what I think good " 

No, T am that I am " 

I may be straight " 

Nor need I tallies " 
to give them from me was I bold " 

boast that I do change " 

and thee I both defy " 

This I do vow " 

I will be true " 

To this I witness call " 

I bore the canopy " 

Have I not seen dwellers " 

Do I envy those jacks " 

I have seen roses " 

roses see I in her cheeks " 
I hive to hear her speak, yet well 

I know " 130 9 



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2 


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1 


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6 


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8 


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9 


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11 


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143 



IDIOT 



I — I grant I never saw Son 

I think ray love as rare " 

I dai-e not be so bold " 

Although I swear it to myself " 

that is not false I swear " 

as I think, proceeds " 

Thine eyes I love " 

Then will I swear beauty " 

and thee, I am forsaken " 

for I, being pent in thee " 

So, now I have confess'd " 

And I myself am mortgaged " 

So him I lose " 

Him have I lost " 

and yet am I not free " 

am I that vex thee still " 

that I was thy ' Will " 

account I one must be " 
I do believe her, though I know 

she lies " 
Simply I credit her false-speaking 

tongue " 

say not I that I am old " 

Therefore I lie with her " 

since I am near slain " 

If I might teach thee ,wit " 
if I should despair, I should grow 

mad " 

That I may not be so " 

I do not love thee " 

thus far I count my gain " 

Be it lawful I love thee " 

Whilst I thy babe chase thee " 

So will I pray " 

Two loves I have of comfort " 

Suspect I may " 

I guess one angel " 

Yet this shall I ne'er know " 

the sound that said ' I hate " 

' I hate ' she alter'd " 

'I hate' from hate away " 

and I desperate now approve " 

Past cure I am " 

For I have sworn thee fair " 

Say I love thee not " 

When I against myself " 
Do I not think on thee when I 

forgot " 

that I do call my friend " 

that I do fawn upon " 

do I not spend " 

do I in myself respect " 

now I know thy mind " 

and I am blind " 

The more I hear " 

0, though I love " 
worthy I to be beloved " 
betraying me, I do betray " 
hold it what I call " 
for whose dear love I rise and fall " 
know'st I am forsworn " 
do I accuse thee " 
When I break twenty? I am per- 
jured most " 

For I have sworn " 
For I have sworn thee fair ; more 

perjured I " 

1, sick withal, the help of bath de- 
sired " 



130 


11 


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11 



I — but I,- my mistress' thrall Son 154. 12 

and this by that I prove " 154 13 

And down I laid L C 4 

tell your judgement I am old " 73 

I might as yet have been " 75 

if I had self-applied " 76 

too early I attended " 78 

'Yet did I not " 148 

I mine honour shielded " 151 

' For further I could say " 169 

upon these terms I held my city " 176 

I have been call'd unto " 181 

Harm have I done to them " 194 

I have received from many " 206 

that I hoard them not " 220 

I myself must render " 221 

Since I their altar " 224 

And mine I pour " 256 

I strong o'er them, and you o'er me " 257 

white stole of chastity I daff' d " 297 

Ay me ! I fell " 321 

What I should do again " 322 

I do believe her, though I know 

she lies P P 1 2 

Although I know my years "16 
I smiling credit her false-sjieaking 

tongue "17 

wherefore say not I that I am old " 1 10 

Two loves I have " 2 1 

Suspect I may " 2 10 

I guess one angel " 2 12 

truth I shall not know " 2 13 
A woman I forswore ; but I will 

prove "35 

I forswore not thee "36 

how shall I swear to love "51 

that I thy parts admire " 5 10 

why was not I a flood " 6 14 

the one and I the other "84 
And I in deep delight am chiefly 

drown'd " 8 11 

did I see a fair sweet youth "99 
I weep for thee, and yet no cause 

I have " 10 7 

more than I did crave " 10 9 

For why I craved nothing " 10 10 

I pardon crave of thee " 10 11 

Ah, that I had my lady " 11 13 

clip me till I run away " 11 14 
Age, I do abhor thee ; youth, I do 

adore thee " 12 9 

Age, I do defy thee " 12 11 
Fare well I could not, for I supp'd 

with sorrow " 14 6 

nill I construe whether " 14 8 

I sit and mark " 15 5 

I post unto my pretty " 15 9 

were I with her " 15 13 

Air, would I might triumph so " 17 10 

For now I see " IS 15 

In black mourn I " 18 19 

All fears scorn I " 18 20 

I see that there is none " 18 54 

too much I fear " 19 49 

There will I make " 20 9 

Scarce I could from tears refrain " 21 16 

Ah, thought I " 21 19 

Thou and I were both beguiled " 21 30 

Idiot — As silly-jeering idiots E L 1812 



IDLE 



144 



IF 



Idle— leave this idle theme VA 422 

idle over-handled theme " 770 

But idle sounds " 848 

Out, idle words, servants R L 1016 

shames and idle hours in me Son 61 7 

above that idle rank remain " 122 3 

each moving sense from idle rest PP 15 3 

Idly — time so idly spent Son 100 6 

Idol — Well-painted idol, image dull 

and dead VA 212 

my beloved as an idol show Son 105 2 

Idolatry — my love be call'd idolatry " 105 1 

If— If thou wilt deign VA 15 

If thou wilt chide " 48 

If they burn too " 192 

if thou wilt have twain " 210 

and if those hills be dry " 233 

if himself were slain " 243 

if there he came to lie " 245 

as if he told the steps " 277 

As if the dead the living should 

exceed " 292 

as if she knew his mind " 308 

If springing things be " 417 

As if from thence they borrow'd " 488 

purchase if thou make " 515 

if any love you owe me " 523 

If you will say so " 536 

If thou encounter " 672 

if thou needs wilt hunt " 673 

As if another chase were " 696 

To hearken if his foes pursue " 699 

But if thou fall " 721 

If thou destroy them not " 760 

If so, the world " 761 

If love have lent you " 775 

If pleased themselves " 843 

if she said 'No " 852 

If he be dead " 937 

If he had spoke " 1097 

If he did see his face " 1109 

As if they heard " 1126 

And, if possess'd It L 23 

if none of those " 44 

if there be self-trust " 158 

if I gain the thing I seek " 211 

'If Collatiuus dream " 218 

ay, if the fact be known " 239 

As if the heavens should counte- 
nance " 343 

As if between them twain there 

were no strife " 405 

if thou mean to chide " 484 

if he mount he dies " 508 

If thou deny " 513 

'But if thou yield " ..... 526 

If ever man were moved " 587 

O, if no harder than a stone thou art " 593 

and if the same " 600 

If in thy hope thou darest do " 605 

If but for fear of this, thy will 

remove " 614 

If all these petty ills shall change " 656 

if not, enforced hate " 668 

Or if thou wilt pernjit " 775 

If that be made a theme " 822 

If, Collatine, thine honour lay in me " 834 

But if the like the snow-white 

swan desire " 1011 



If— For if I die P £ 1032 

But if I live " 1033 

Who, if it wink " 1139 

If in this blemish'd fort I make " 1175 

If thou dost weep " 1272 

If tears could help " 1274 

But, lady, if your maid may be " 1282 

' if it should be told " 1284 

If ever, love, thy Lucrece " 1306 

As if some mermaid did their ears 
entice " 1411 

As if with grief or travail he had 
fainted " 1543 

If thou my love's desire do con- 
tradict " 1631 

as if her heart would break " 1716 

If iu the child the father's image lies " 1753 

If children pre-decease progenitors " 1756 

If they surcease to be " 1766 

as if the name he tore " 1787 

If thou couldst answer Sori 2 10 

if now thou not renewest "33 

But if thou live " 3 13 

If ten of thine ten times refigured 
thee " 6 10 

if thou shouldst depart " 6 11 

If the true concord of well tuned 
sounds "85 

if thou issueless shalt hap to die "93 

Grant, if thou wilt "10 3 

If all were minded so " 11 7 

if it shall go well " 14 7 

If from thyself to store thou 
wouldst convert 

If it were fiU'd 

If I could write 

as if not paid before 

But if the while I think on thee 

If thou survive 

if aught in me 

If my slight Muse do please 

if for my love thou my love re- 
ceivest 

if thou thyself deceivest 

If I lose thee 

If the dull substance of my flesh 
were thought 

Or, if they sleep 

if ever that time come 

As if by some instinct the wretch 
did know 

If there be nothing new 

If soiue suspect oi ill mask'd not 
thy show 

Nay, if you read this line 

If thinking on me then 

0, if, I say, you look upon 

Then if he thrive 

of you, if he can tell 

thou wilt; if ever now 

If thou wilt leave me 

If thy sweet virtue answer not 

But if that flower with base infec- 
tion meet 

If like a lamb he could his looks 
translate 

If thou wouldst use 

Or, if they sing 

If not from my love's breath 



14 


12 


17 


2 


17 


5 


30 


12 


30 


13 


32 


1 


33 


5 


38 


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40 


5 


40 


7 


42 


9 


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1 


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13 


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1 


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7 


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1 


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13 


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5 


71 


8 


71 


9 


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13 


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7 


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1 


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9 


93 


14 



96 


10 


96 


12 


97 


13 


99 


3 



IF 



145 



IMAGE 



If— If Time have any wrinkle graven (Son 100 10 
If any, be a satire to decay " 100 11 
if never interuiix'd " 101 8 
if I no more can write " 103 5 
if I have ranged " 109 5 
For if it see the rudest " 113 9 
If it be poison'd " 114 13 
If this be error " 116 13 
For if you were " 120 5 
If my dear love were but the child " 124 1 
If Nature, sovereign mistress " 126 5 
Or if it were " 127 2 
But is profaned, if not lives in dis- 
grace " 127 8 
If snow be white " 130 3 
If hairs be wires " 130 4 
If thy soul check thee " 136 1 
If eyes, corrupt by over-partial 

looks " 137 5 

If 1 might teach thee " 140 5 

For if I should despair " 140 9 

Or, if it do, not from those lips " 142 5 

If thou dost seek " 142 13 

But if thou catch " 148 11 

If thou turn back " 143 14 

Or, if they have " 148 3 

If that be fair whereon " 148 5 

If it be not, then love " 148 7 

if thou lour'st on me " 149 7 
If thy unworthiness raised love in 

me " 150 13 

If that from him there may be L C 6S 

if I had self-applied " 76 

If best were as it was " 98 

Yet, if men moved him " 101 

If broken then it is no fault PP 3 12 

If by me broke " 3 13 

If love make me forsworn "51 

if not to beauty vowed "52 

If knowledge be the mark " 5 7 

If music and sweet poetry agree "81 

As if the boy should use " 11 8 
And if these pleasures may thee 

move " 20 15 
If that the world and love were 

young " 20 17 

But if store of crowns be scant " 21 37 

If that one be prodigal " 21 39 

If he be addict to vice " 21 43 

If to women he be bent " 21 45 

But if Fortune once do frown " 21 47 

If thou sorrow, he will weep " 21 53 

If thou wake, he cannot sleep " 21 54 

If what parts can so remain P T 48 

Ignorance — ignorance aloft to fly Son 78 6 

my rude ignorance " 78 14 

Ignoriint— All ignorant that soul P P 5 9 

111— This ill presage VA 457 

Whose inward ill no outward 

harm express'd R L 91 

So that in venturing ill " 148 

they all rate his ill " 304 

had they seen the period of their ill " 380 

he commits this ill " 476 

End thy ill aim " 579 

If all these petty ills " 656 

that thou taught'st this ill " 996 

the slander of mine ill " 1207 

not the authors of their ill " 1244 

10 



111— this blunt and ill li L .... 1300 

lodged not a mind so ill " 1530 

'What uncouth ill event " 1595 

her babe from faring ill Son 22 12 

and ransom all ill deeds " 34 14 

in whom all ill well shows " 40 13 

any thing, he thinks no ill " 57 14 

be it ill or well " 58 14 
captive good attending captain ill " 66 12 

If some suspect of ill " 70' 13 

disgrace me half so ill " 89 5 

though new-fangled ill " 91 3 

blesses an ill report " 95 8 

The hardest knife ill used " 95 14 

who calls me well or ill " 112 3 

The ills that were not " 118 10 

would by ill be cured " 118 12 

benefit of ill "119 9 

gain by ill thrice more " 119 14 

might speak ill of thee " 140 10 

a woman colour'd ill " 144 4 

which doth preserve the ill " 147 3 

this becoming of things ill " 150 5 

The destined ill she must L C 156 

faults in love with love's ill rest P P 1 8 

a woman colour'd ill "24 

I'll — I'll smother thee with kisses VA 18 

I'll sigh celestial breath " 188 

I'll make a shadow " 191 

I'll quench them " 192 

I'll give it thee again " 209 

I'll be a park " 231 

this night I'll waste " 583 

I'll beg her love Ji L 241 

worthless slave of thine I'll slay " 515 

I'll hum on Tarquin still " 1133 

to Tarquin I'll bequeath " 1181 

I'll bequeath unto the knife " 1184 

I'll tune thy woes " 1465 

I'll murder straight, and then I'll 

slaughter thee " 1634 

for their style I'll read Son 32 14 

Towards thee I'll run " 51 14 

against myself I'll fight " 88 3 

As I'll myself disgrace " 89 7 

against myself I'll vow debate " 89 13 

Myself I'll forfeit " 134 3 

Therefore I'll lie with love P P 1 13 

to thee I'll constant prove "53 

Ill-annexed — But .... Opportunity R L 874 

Ilion — cloud-kissing Ilion with aunoy " 1370 

Of rich-built Ilion " 1524 

Illiterate — Yea, the illiterate that 

know not how " 810 

Ill-nurtured — Ill-nurtured, crooked If ^4 134 

Ill-resounding — his .... noise " 919 

Illumined — illumined with iier eye " 486 

Ill-Avresting — Now this .... world Son 140 11 

Image — image dull and dead V A 212 

An image like thyself " 664 

her heavenly image sits R L 288 

image of hell " 764 

That for Achilles' image " 1424 

a wretched image bound " .. .. 1501 

this mild image drew " 1.520 

That she with painted images " 1577 

the father's image lies " 1753 

my image thou hast torn " 1762 

thine image dies with thee Son 3 14 



IMAGE 



146 



IN 



Son 


24 


" 


31 


" 


59 


" 


61 


VA 




RL 




Son 


27 


VA 





RL . 
LC 
VA . 
RL 



Son 

RL 
VA 
RL 
VA 



Son 81 



Image — your true image pictured 
lies 

Their images I loved 

Show me your image 

thy image should keep open 
Imaginary — All is imaginary 

For much imaginary work 

my soul's imaginary sight 
Imagination— tremble at the .... 

The dire imagination 

in still imagination 

that in the imagination set 
Imagine — O, then imagine this 

Imagine her as one 

Imagine every eye 
Imagined — for the whole to be ... 

else may be imagined 
Imitate — To imitate thee well 

to imitate the battle 

painting imitate his cheek 
Imitated — Is poorly .... after you 
Immaculate — . . . . and spotless 
Immodest — saith she is immodest 
Immodestly — . . . . lies martyr'd 
Immortal — by her fair .... hand 

And were I not immortal 

immortal life shall have 
Immortality — Her immortality, and 

made her thrall R L 

Immure — Means to immure herself T^^-1 

Immurod^immured is the store Son 84 

would she be immured L C 

Imi)air— For I impair not beauty Son 83 
Impanneled — To 'cide this title is . . . ." 4fi 
Impart — truth would willingly .... " 72 

Imparteth — no tool imparteth R L 

Impartial — Whereat the gazer VA 

Impatience — This said chokes " 

Impeach'd — AVhen most impeach'd Son 125 
Impediment — Admit impediments " 116 

those impediments stand forth L C 

Imperfect — thy fair imperfect shade Son 
Imperious — Imperious supreme of 

all VA 

Imperiously — Imperiously he leaps " 
Impiety — impiety hath wrought R L 

not be call'd impiety " 

with his presence grace impiety Son 
Impious— ,0 impious act R L 

The impious breach " 

Inipleacli'd — metal amorously .... L C 

Import — Were to forgetfulness Son 122 

Importune— "Whom thine eyes woo 

as mine importune thee " 142 

Imposition — in knighthood to her 

imposition R L 

Impostliumes — Surfeits, . . . ., grief T'^ 

Impregnable— When rocks Son 65 

Impresses!- When thou impressest L C 

Impression — to every light ... . VA ..... 

the impression of strange kinds R L 

which deep impression bears " 

■doth the impression till Son 112 

Imprint — thy mind's .... will bear " 77 

Imprinted — my soft lips imprinted V A 

Imprison'd — . ... in the ground " 

imprison'd in a body dead R L 

unfolding his imprison'd pride Son 52 

The impirison'd absence " 58 



43 



67 



6 

13 

7 

1 

597 

1422 

9 

668 

975 

702 

136 

721 

449 

1343 

1428 

1622 

1137 

1438 

5 

6 

1656 

53 

,802 

80 

197 

5 

725 

1194 

3 

251 

11 

9 

8 

1039 

748 

217 

14 

2 

269 

11 

996 
265 
341 
1174 
2 
199 
809 
205 
14 

10 

1697 
743 
7 
267 
566 
1242 
1712 
1 

511 

1046 

1456 

12 

6 



Impure — with impure defeature VA 736 

to purge my impure tale R L 1078 

Impurity — That some impurity " 854 

Impute — for my sin you did impute Son 83 9 

In — In such time-beguiling V A 24 

trembling in her isassion " 27 

in a dull disdain " 33 

but frosty in desire " 36 

goveru'd him in strength, though 

not in lust " 42 

devcruring all in haste " 57 

breatheth in her face " 62 

tangled 11 a net " 67 

fasten'd in her arms " 68 

in his angry eyes " 70 

ducks as quickly in " 87 

in summer's heat " 91 

She bathes in water " 94 

in battle ne'er did bow " 99 

in every jar " lOO 

in a red-rose chain " 110 

see'st thou in the ground " 118 

Look in mine eyeballs " 119 

Since eyes in eyes " 120 

sport is not in sight " 124 

in their prime " 131 

in little time " 132 

churlish, harsh in voice " 134 

one wrinkle in my brow " 139 

quick in turning " 140 

Would in thy palm " 144 

his shadow in the brook " 162 

And so, in spite of death " 173 

In that thy likeness " 174 

tired in the mid-day heat " 177 

Being judge in love " 220 

in her arms be bound " 226 

fingers one in one " 228 

mountain or in dale " 232 

smiles as in disdain " 241 

That in each cheek " 242 

in a tomb so simple " 244 

in thine own law " 251 

smiles at thee in scorn " 2.52 

In limning out " 290 

In shape, in courage " 294 

poor flics in his fume " 316 

as desperate in his suit " 336 

holds her in his eye " 342 

in a gaol of snow " 362 

ivory in an alabaster band " 363 

bondage in disdain " 394 

in her naked bed " 397 

it is a life in death " 413 

wither in their prime " 418 

Each part in me " 436 

should I be in love " -438 

stealing in disturb the feast " 450 

breatheth life in her " 474 

When in his fresh array " 483 

in water seen by night " 492 

in earth or heaven " 493 

Or in the ocean drench'd, or in the 

flre " 494 

in my soft lips " 511 

hath ended in the west " 530 

Chiefly in love " 568 

incaged in his breast " 582 

I'll waste in sorrow " 583 



IN 



147 



IN 



In — is she in the very lists VA 595 

in her mishaps " 603 

in him finds missing " 605 

but all in vain " 607 

whate'er is in his way " 623 

lurk in mine eye " 644 

in a peaceful hour " 652 

gentle Love in his desire " 653 

whispers in mine ear " 659 

pursuers in their yell " 688 

were in the skies " 696 

'In night,' quoth she " 720 

The earth in love " 722 

in high heaven's despite " 731 

But in one minute's fight " 746 

in dark obscurity " 760 

will hold thee in disdain " 761 

Sith in thy pride " 762 

So in thyself " 763 

is bestow'd in vain " 771 

all in vain you strive " 772 

armed in mine ear " 779 

In his bedchamber " 784 

your device in love " 789 

Therefore in sadness " 807 

glides he in the night " 816 

Fold in the object " 822 

jewel in the flood " 824 

in some mistrustful " 826 

in the dark she lay " 827 

wise in folly, foolish-witty " 838 

Still concludes in woe " 839 

In such-like circumstance " 844 

ariseth in his majesty " 856 

And all in haste " 870 

The bushes in the way " 871 

hid in some brake " 876 

up in fatal folds just in his way " 879 

remaineth in one place " 885 

rings sadly in her ear " 889 

in a trembling ecstasy " 895 

In hand with all " 912 

kennell'd in a brake " 913 

In the sweet channel " 958 

seen in the tears, tears in her eye " 962 

prison'd in her eye like pearls in 

glass " 980 

In thoughts unlikely " 989 

In likely thoughts " 990 

And in her haste " 1029 

in his shelly cave " 1034 

up in shade doth sit " 1035 

perplexed in his throne " 1043 

In his soft flank " 1053 

And straight, in pity '' 1091 

his shadow in the brook " 1099 

some other in their bills " 1102 

And nuzzling in his flank " 1115 

in his soft groin " 1116 

in the place she stood " 1121 

she whispers in his ear " 1125 

in darkness lies " 1128 

in a breathing while " 1142 

Sith in his prime " 1163 

And in his blood " 1167 

Which in round drops " 1170 

and In the breach appears " 1175 

To wither in my breast as in his 

blood " 1182 



In — here in my breast VA 1183 

Lo, in this hollow cradle " 1185 

one minute in an hour " 1187 

In her light chariot " 1192 

all in post It L 1 

in pale embers hid " 5 

Which triumph'd in that sky " 12 

in Tarquin's tent " 15 

In the possession " 18 

in the owner's arms " 27 

which in his liver glows " 47 

wrapp'd in repentant cold " 48 

boasted blushes, in despite " 55 

in that white intituled " 57 

use it in the fight " 62 

in Lucrece' face was seen " 64 

in her fair face's field " 72 

In their pure ranks " 73 

triumph in so false a foe " 77 

In that high task " 80 

In silent wonder " 84 

in plaits of majesty " 93 

That nothing in him seem'd " 94 

so wanteth in his store " 97 

Writ in the glassy margents " 102 

Won in the fields " 107 

Doth yet in his fair welkin once 

appear " 116 

And in her vaulty prison stows " 119 

in this poor-rich gain " 140 

in waning age " 142 

And in this aim there is " 143 

in fell battle's rage " 145 

So that in venturing " 148 

In having mvich " 151 

And in his inward mind " 185 

engraven in my face " 203 

in my golden coat " 205 

and in a desperate rage " 219 

Or lain in ambush " 233 

As in revenge " 236 

there is no hate in loving " 240 

be kept in awe " 245 

Which in a moment " 250 

in my eager eyes " 254 

in my hand being lock'd " 260 

him in the flood " 266 

remorse in poor abuses " 269 

Love thrives not in the heart " 270 

And in the self-same seat " 289 

extinguishing his conduct in this 

case " 313 

return again in haste " 321 

He in the worst sense " 324 

But in the midst " 344 

assist me in the act " 350 

Rolling his greedy eyeballs in his 

head " 368 

in that darksome prison " 379 

In his clear bed " 382 

seems to part in sunder " 388 

And canopied in darkness " 398 

in the map of death " 402 

in life's mortality " 403 

Each in her sleep " 404 

life lived in death and death in life " 406 

These worlds in Tarquin new am- 
bition bred " 411 

And in his will " 417 



IN 



148 



IN 



111— In bloody death Jt L 430 

Swell in their pride " 432 

one in dead of night " 449 

but she in worser taking " 453 

in a thousand fears " 456 

ugly in her eyes " 459 

In darkness daunts them " 462 

This moves in hira more rage " 468 

' The colour in thy face " 477 

even in my soul " 498 

towering in the skies " 506 

For in thy bed ' " 514 

And in thy dead arms " 517 

cited up in rhymes " 524 

in succeeding times " 525 

In a pure compound " 531 

His venom in eflfect " 532 

in men's nativity " 538 

Plead, in a wilderness " 544 

In his dim mist " 548 

While in his hold-fast foot " 555 

even in plenty wanteth " 557 

In the remorseless wrinkles " 562 

' In Tarquin's likeness " 596 

be seeded in thine age " 603 

If in thy hope " 605 

cannot be hid in clay " 609 

When they in thee the like of- 
fences prove " 613 

Must he in thee read " 618 

dishonour in thy name " 621 

trespass in another " 632 

death-worthy in thy brother " 635 

wrapp'd in with infamies " 636 

in greater fury fret " 648 

in thy sea dispersed " 658 

Thou loathed in their shame, they 

in thy pride " 662 

in this shameful doom " 672 

in blind concealing night " 675 

in her lips' sweet fold " 679 

He pens her piteous clamours in 

her head " 681 

Cooling his hot face in the chastest 

tears " 682 

in digestion souring " 699 

comprehend in still imagination " 702 

Lust is in his pride " 705 

brought in subjection " 724 

Which in her prescience she con- 

trolleth " 727 

Even in this thought " 729 

hath lost in gain " 730 

perplex'd in greater pain " 733 

He in his speed " 745 

still in darkness be " 752 

that doth eat in steel " 755 

That in their smoky ranks " 783 

co-partners in my pain " 789 

And fellowship in woe " 790 

which in thy reign are made " 804 

sepulchred in thy shade " 805 

character'd in my brow " 807 

■writ in learned books " 811 

in my looks " 812 

stamp'd in Collatinus' face " 829 

How he in peace is wounded, not 

in war " 831 

honour lay in me " 834 



In — In thy weak hive a wandering 

wasp had crept R L 839 

profaned in such a devil " 847 

hatch in sparrows' nests " 849 

lurk in gentle breasts " 851 

Who in their pride " 864 

Even in the moment " 868 

And in thy shady cell " 881 

To stamp the seal of time in aged 

things " 941 

in themselves beguiled " 957 

in thy pilgrimage " 960 

minute in an age " 962 

Tarquin in his flight " 968 

AiHict him in his bed " 975 

tigers in their wildness " 980 

In time of sorrow " 991 

bathe his coal-black wings in mire " 1009 

in skill-contending schools " 1018 

'In vain I rail " 1023 

In vain I cavil " 1025 

In vain I spurn " 1026 

my honour lives in thee " 1032 

thou livest in my defame " 1033 

that in air consumes " 1042 

'In vain,' quoth she, 'I live, and 

seek in vain " 1044 

in secret thought " 1065 

in cleanly-coin'd excuses " 1073 

Still in night " 1085 

in a sea of care " 1100 

in merry company " 1110 

And in my hearing be you dumb " 1123 

drown in ken of shore " 1114 

in my dishevell'd hair " 1129 

sing'st not in the day " 1142 

is she in mutiny " 1153 

swallow'd in confusion " 1159 

If in this blemish'd fort " 1175 

in that sad hour " 1179 

writ in my testament " ..... 1183 

For in my death " 1189 

read it in me " 1195 

set in her mistress' sky " 1230 

Who in a salt-waved ocean " 1231 

the other takes in hand " 1235 

Is form'd in them " 1243 

In men, as in a rough-grown grove " 1249 

The precedent whereof in Lucrece 

view " 1261 

from our house in grief " 1308 

To talk in deeds " 1348 

in both their faces " 1353 

spied in her some blemish " 1358 

In scorn of nature " 1374 

burnt out in tedious nights " 1379 

observance in this work was had " 1385 

In great commanders " 1387 

triumphing in their faces " 13SS 

In youth, quick bearing " 1389 

In Ajax and Ulysses " 1394 

In Ajax' eyes blunt rage and 

rigour roU'd " 1398 

In speech, it seem'd " 1405 

And in their rage " 1419 

Griped in an armed hand " 1425 

In her the painter had anatomized " 1450 

changed to black in every vein " 1454 

imprison'd in a body dead " 1456 



IN 



149 



IN 



In — in Priam's painted wound B L 1466 

And here in Troy • " 1-176 

a private sin in general " 1484 

in bloody channel lies " 1487 

In him the painter " 1506 

some shape in Sinon's was abused " 1529 

in his plain face " 1532 

can lurk in such a look " 1535 

came in her mind " 1536 

she in that sense forsook " 1538 

For Sinon in liis fire doth quake " 1556 

And in that cold, hot-burning fire 

doth dwell " 1557 

in sorrow's sharp sustaining " 1573 

in shows of discontent " 1580 

clad in mourning black " 1585 

like rainbows in the sky " 1587 

water-galls in her dim element " 1588 

Amazedly in her sad face " 1591 

though sod in tears " 1592 

in a trance " 1595 

attired in discontent " 1801 

swan in her watery nest " 1611 

In me moe woes " 1615 

in the interest of thy bed " 1619 

' For in tlie dreadful dead of dark 

midnight " 1625 

in my chamber came " 1626 

The lechers in their deed " 1637 

be forgot in mighty Rome " 1644 

Doth in her poison'd closet " 1659 

he strives in vain " 1665 

Yet in the eddy, boundeth in his 

pride " 1669 

In rage sent out, recall'd in rage " 1671 

As bound in knightliood " 1697 

carved in it with tears " 1713 

in ]ier harmless breast " 1723 

Her blood, in poor revenge, held 

it in chase " 1736 

In two slow rivers " 173S 

Circles her body in " 1739 

in this fearful fiood " 1741 

If in the child " 1753 

In thy sweet semblance " 1759 

And then in key-cold Lucrece' 

bleeding stream " 1774 

pale fear in his face " 1775 

come in his poor heart's aid " 1784 

emulation in their woe " 1808 

his wit in state " 1809 

Burying in Lucrece' wound " 1810 

in CoUatinus' eyes " 1817 

In such relenting dew " 1829 

in them doth stand " 1833 

country rights in Rome maintained " 1838 

makes waste in niggarding Son 1 12 

in thy beauty's field "22 

Look in thy glass "31 

and she in thee "39 

pent in walls of glass " 5 10 

In thee thy summer "62 

Leaving thee living in posterity " 6 12 

Lo, in the orient "71 

youth in his middle age "76 

out-going in thy noon " 7 13 

joy delights in joy "82 

In singleness the parts "88 

Strikes each in each " 8 10 



In — Who all in one 

consumest thyself in single life 

husband's shape in mind 

in the world doth spend 

hath in the world an end 

in that bosom sits 

live in thine or thee 

In one of thine 

shouldst in bounty cherish 

sunk in hideous night 

girded up in sheaves 

which you hold in lease 

in honour might uphold 

that I in heaven find 

in them I read such art 

Holds in perfection 

Vaunt in their youthful sap 

in youth before my sight 

And all in war with Time 

fortify yourself in your decay 

neither in inward worth 

live yourself in eyes of men 

in time to come 

And in fresh numbers 

live twice, in it and in my rhyme 

wander'st in his shade 

When in eternal lines 

phcenix in lier blood 

Him in thy course 

love shall in my verse 

less false in rolling 

A man in hue, all 'hues' in his 

controlling 
in this huge rondure hems 
O, let me, true in love 
fix'd in heaven's air 
in thee time's furrows I behold 
Which in thy breast doth live, as 

thine in me 
And in mine own love's strength, 
in table of my heart 
Which in thy bosom's shop 
who are in favour 
joy in that I honour 
And in themselves their pride lies 

buried 
they in their glory die 
to whom in vassalage 
in wanting words to show it 
In thy soul's thought 
a journey in my head 
hung in ghastly night 
return in happy plight 
in consent shake hands 
When, in disgrace 
more rich in hope 
Yet in these thoughts 
hid in death's dateless night 
hidden in tliee lie 
I view in thee 
To march in ranks 
o'ertake me in my way 
Hiding thy bravery in their rotten 

smoke 
lives in sweetest bud 
and even I in this 
I bring in sense 
war is in my love 
In our two loves there io 



Son 



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IN 



150 



IN 



In — Though in our lives Sou 

I love thee in such sort " 

Entitled in thy parts " 
That I in thy abundance am sufficed " 

that best I wish in thee " 

if aught in me " 

ten times more in worth " 

in whom all ill " 

lead thee in their riot " 

A loss in love " 

in dreams they look " 

are bright in dark directed " 

in the living day • " 

When in dead night " 

In tender embassy of love " 

thou in him dost lie " 

And says in him " 

Or heart in love " 

- And in his thoughts " 

thy picture in my sight " 

in sure wards of trust " 

lock'd up in any chest " 

that weight in me " 

put this in my mind " 

In winged speed " 

in his fiery race " 

in the long year set " 

jewels in the carcanet " 

you in Grecian tires " 

in every blessed shape " 

in all external grace " 

which doth in it live " 

bright in these contents " 

Even in the eyes " 
You live in this, and dwell in 

lovers' eyes " 

In his former might " 

that in your will " 

should in thought control " 

in some antique book " 

in character was done " 

in sequent toil " 

in the main of light " 

in beauty's brow " 

in hope my verse shall stand " 

and idle hours in me " 

inward in my heart " 

in all worth surmounts " 
shall in these black lines be seen " 

he in them still green " 

That in black ink " 

trinim'd in jollity " 

in days long since " 
in him those holy antique hours 

are seen " 

In other accents " 

And that, in guess " 
that flies in heaven's sweetest air " 

in your sweet thoughts " 

merit lived in me " 

For you in me " 

seem false in this " 

maj'st in me behold " 

In me thou see'st " 

fadeth in the west " 

seals up all in rest " 

In me thou see'st " 
Hath in this line some interest " 

in a noted weed " 



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In — assistance in my verse Son 

In others' works thou dost but mend " 

found it in thy cheek " 

what in thee doth live " 
And in the praise thereof spends " 

when I in earth am rotten " 
in me each part will be forgotten " 

entombed in men's eyes " 

in the mouths of men " 
Thou art as fair in knowledge as 

in hue " 

in true plain words " 

in thee it is abused " 

slept in your report " 

what worth in you doth grow " 

in one of your fair eyes " 

poets can in praise devise " 

In whose confine immured " 

what in you is writ " 
Muse in manners holds her still " 

In polish'd form " 

that is in my thought " 

speaking in effect " 

thoughts in my brain " 

My bonds in thee " 

gift in me is wanting " 

In sleep a king " 

in the eye of scorn " 

thou in losing me " 

and in my tongue " 

do not drop in for an after-loss " 

Come in the rearward " 

But in the onset come " 
Some glory in their birth, some in 

their skill " 
Some in their wealth, some in 

their body's force " 

Some in their gai-ments " 
Some in their hawks and hounds, 

some in their horse " 

I better in one general best " 

Wretched in this alone " 

When in the least " 

heart in other place " 

no hatred in thine eye " 

In that I cannot know " 

In many's looks " 

Is writ in moods " 
heaven in thy creation did decree " 

That in thy face " 

canker in the fragrant rose " 
O, in what sweets dost thou thy 

sins inclose " 

but in a kind of praise " 

that in thee are seen " 

I love thee In such sort " 

been absent in the spring " 

, dress'd in all his trim " 

youth in every thing " 

flowers in odour and in hue " 

Vermillion in the rose " 

In my love's veins " 

in pride of all his growth " 

In gentle numbers " 

truth in beauty dyed " 

for't lies in thee " 

more weak in seeming " 

but in the spring " 

in summer's front doth sing " 



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IN 



151 



IN 



In — stops her pipe in growth of 

riper days Son 

Look iu your glass " 

iu my verse can sit " 

when you look in it " 
In process of the seasons have I 

seen " 

in three hot Junes burn'd " 

in a wondrous excellence " 

And in this change " 

Three themes in one " 

never kept seat in one " 

When in the chronicle " 

In praise of ladies dead " 

Then, in the blazon " 

I'll live in this jioor rhyme " 
in this shalt find thy monument " 

What's in the brain " 

in love's fresh cause " 

in thy breast doth lie " 

in my nature reigu'd " 

in it thou art my all " 

A god in love " 

To what it works in " 

In so profound abysm I throw " 

in my purpose bred " 

mine eye is in my mind " 

'tis flattery in my seeing " 

Creep in 'twixt vows " 

In your waken'd hate " 

Thus policy in love " 
In the distraction of this madding 

fever " 

I sufFer'd in your crime " 

Which in their wills " 

in their badness reign " 

forgetfulness in me " 

It suffers not iu smiling pomp " 

in their gazing spent " 

obsequious in thy heart " 

stands least in thy control " 

who in thy power " 

In the old age " 

if not lives in disgrace " 

so happy are in this " 

in a waste of shame " 

Is lust in action " 
Mad in pursuit, and in possession so " 

and in quest to have " 

A bliss in proof " 

see I in her cheeks " 

And in some perfumes " 

Than in the breath " 

Yet, in good faith " 

in my judgement's place " 
In nothing art thou black save in 

thy deeds " 

that ushers in the even " 

like in every part " 

in thy steel bosom's ward " 

use rigour in my gaol " 

for I, being pent in thee " 

and all that is in me " 

and ' Will,' in overplus " 

hide my will in thine " 

Shall will in others seem " 

And in my will " 

And in abundance " 

So thou, being rich in ' Will " 



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125 


14 


126 


1 


127 


1 


127 


8 


128 


13 


129 


1 


129 


2 


129 


9 


129 


10 


129 


11 


130 


6 


130 


7 


130 


8 


131 


5 


131 


12 


131 


13 


132 


7 


132 


12 


133 


9 


133 


12 


133 


13 


133 


14 


135 


2 


135 


6 


135 


7 


135 


8 


135 


10 


135 


11 



In— and me in that one ' Will Son 135 14 

in things of great receipt " 136 7 

Then in the number " lay 9 

Though in thy store's account " 136 10 

Be anchor'd in the bay " 137 6 

In things right true " 137 13 

in the world's false subtleties " 138 4 

is in seeming trust " 138 11 

And age in love " 138 12 

And in our faults " 138 14 

butjn my sight " 139 5 

And in my madness " 140 10 

In faith, I do not love thee " 141 1 

they in thee a thousand errors note " 141 2 

in despite of view " 141 4 

Boot pity in thy heart " 142 11 

In pursuit of the thing " 143 4 

child holds her in chase " 143 5 

one angel in another's hell " 144 12 

but live in doubt " 144 13 

Straight in her heart " 145 5 

in giving gentle doom " 145 7 

in selling hours of dross " 146 11 

Love put in ray head " 148 1 

do I in myself respect " 149 9 

That in the very refuse " 150 6 

That, in my mind, thy worst " 150 8 

raised love in me " 150 13 

Triumph in love " 151 8 

To stand in thy affairs " 151 12 

In loving thee " 152 1 

In act thy bed-vow broke " 152 3 

In vowing new hate " 152 4 

faith in thee is lost " 152 8 

In a cold valley-fountain " 153 4 

but in her maiden hand " 154 4 

in a cool well by " 154 9 

silken figures in the brine i C 17 

had pelleted in tears " 18 

In clamours of all size " 21 

nor tied in formal plat " 29 

in her a careless hand of pride " 30 

Some in her threaden fillet " 33 

braided in loose negligence " 35 

she in a river threw " 38 

find their sepulchres in mud " 46 

sadly penn'd in blood " 47 

she in her fluxive eyes " 50 

This said, in top of rage " 55 

In brief the grounds and motives " 63 

in the charity of age " 70 

though in me you behold " 71 

And when in his fair parts " 83 

did hang in crooked curls " 85 

was in little drawn " 90 

thinks in Paradise was sawn " 91 

wavering stood in doubt " 97 

falseness in a pride of truth " 105 

in himself, not in his case " 116 

catching all passions iu his craft 

of will " 126 

in the general bosom reign " 127 

dwell with him in thoughts " ... . 129 

In personal duty, following " 130 

and in it put their mind " 135 

that in the imagination set " 133 

theirs in thought assign'd " 1.33 

And labouring in moe pleasures " 139 

That did in freedom stand " 143 



IN 



152 



INFECTED 



In — fee-simple, not in part L C 144 

art in youth and youth in art " 145 

in his charmed power " 146 

myself in honour so forbid " 150 

To put the by-past perils in her way " 158 

that preach in our behoof " 165 

in others' orchards grew " 171 

were gilded in his smiling " ..... 172 

of shame in me remains " 188 

Kept hearts in liveries " 195 

commanding in his monarchy " 196 

In bloodless white " 201 

Encamp'd in hearts " 203 

in whose fresh regard " 213 

parcels in combined sums " 231 

noble suit in court did shun " 234 

her living in eternal love " 238 

sports in unconstrained gyves " 242 

in that my boast is true " 246 

their fountains in my well " 255 

ay, dieted in grace " 261 

In thee hath neither sting " 265 

in the suffering pangs it bears " 272 

In the small orb of one " 289 

In him a plenitude of subtile matter " 302 

In either's aptness " 306 

which in his level came " 309 

And, veil'd in them, did win " 312 

burn'd in heart-wish'd luxury " 314 

which in his cheek so glow'd " 324 

in the world's false forgeries P P 1 4 

in love with love's ill rest "18 

And age, in love " 1 12 

in love thus smother'd be " 1 14 

one angel in another's hell " 2 12 

but live in doubt " 2 13 

cures all disgrace in me "38 

vow; in thee it is " 3 11 

all in love forlorn "63 

bounced in, whereas he stood " 6 13 

Yet in the midst of all " 7 11 
Bad in the best, though excellent 

in neither " 7 18 

And I in deep delight " 8 11 

and both in thee remain " 8 14 

Here in these brakes " 9 10 

Deep in the thigh " 9 11 

See, in my thigh " 9 12 
Pluck'd in the bud and vaded in. 

the spring " 10 2 

thou left'st me nothing in thy will " 10 8 

clipp'd Adonis in her arms " 11 6 

In spite of physic " 13 12 

In scorn or friendship " 14 8 

To put in practice either " 16 7 

Playing in the wanton air " 17 4 

firmly fix'd in love " 18 11 

More in women than in men remain " 18 18 

In black mourn I " 18 19 

Living in thrall " 18 22 

In howling wise, to see " 18 33 

men in bloody fight " 18 36 

In faith, you had not ' " 19 24 

ringing in thy lady's ear " 19 28 

And in thy suit be humble " 19 32 

toys that in them lurk " 19 39 

kisses all the joys in bed " 19 47 

in every shepherd's tongue " 20 18 

In the merry month " 21 2 



In — Sitting in a pleasant shade PP 21 3 

thou mourn'st in vain " 21 19 

All thy friends are lapp'd in lead " 21 24 

Is no friend in misery " 21 32 

help thee in thy need " 21 52 

Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55 

priest in surplice white P T 13 

In a mutual flame " 24 

loved, as love in twain " 25 

essence but in one " 26 

there in love was slain " 28 

But in them it were a wonder " 32 

Flaming in the phcenix' sight " 35 

Eeason, in itself confounded " 41 

Grace in all simplicity " 54 

enclosed in cinders lie " 55 

In caged — incaged in his breast VA £82 

Incapable — Incapable of more Son 113 13 

Incense — Offer pure incense R L 194 

Incertainty — Incertainties now 

crown themselves Son 107 7 

certain o'er incertainty " 115 11 

Incest— Guilty of incest R L 921 

Inclination — An accessary by thine 

incliuation " 922 

Incline — so false will not incline " 292 

Inclined — that never was inclined " 1657 

Inclose— dost thou thy sins inclose Son 95 4 

Including — all foul harms R L 199 

Income — the income of each pre- 
cious thing " 334 

Inconstancy — Inconstancy P P 18 17 

Inconstant — of this inconstant stay Son 15 9 

vex me with inconstant mind " 92 9 
Incorporate — Incorporate then they 

seem VA 540 

Increase — Upon the earth's increase " 169 

with thy increase be fed " 170 

You do it for increase " 791 

we desire increase Son 1 1 

wisdom, beauty, and increase " 11 o 

big with rich increase " 97 6 

Increase — that men as plants increase " 15 5 

Increaseful — ploughman with in- 

creaseful crops R L 958 

Increasing — her woes the more .... VA 254 

Increasing store with loss Son 64 8 

Incur — fond Paris, did incur R L 1473 

Indeed — seeing thee so indeed V A 667 

indeed to do me good R L 1028 

shows me myself indeed Son 62 9 

He that is thy friend indeed P P 21 51 

Indenting — indenting with the way K^ 704 

Indigcst— monsters and things .... Son 114 5 

Indirectly — poor beauty .... seek " 67 7 

Infamy — to embrace mine infamy R L 504 

not their own infamy " 539 

wrapp'd in with infamies " 636 

and hide their infamy " 794 

I cavil with mine infamy " 1025 

A dying life to living infamy " 1055 

engirt with daring infamy " 1173 

and thy perpetual infamy " 1638 

Infant — Or like the froward infant VA 562 

cleaves an infant's heart " 942 

Old woes, not infant sorrows R L 1096 

her poor infant's discontent Son 143 8 

Infect— Or toads infect fair founts R L 850 

Infected— 0, that infected moisture L C 323 



INFECTION 



153 



INVISIBLE 



Infection — To drive infection VA 508 

while infection breeds M L 907 

TPith infection should he live Son 67 1 

■with base infection meet " 94 11 

'gainst ray strong infection " 111 10 

Infei'ior — inferior far to his " 80 7 

Infirmity — beauty with infirmities V A 735 

ambitious foul infirmity R L 150 

'Twas not their infirmity P T 60 

Inflame — when thou wilt inflame // C 268 

Inflaming — by his side his heart- 
inflaming brand Son 154 2 

Inflict— this night I will inflict R L 1630 

Influence — The beauteous influence F^ 862 

in secret influence comment Son 15 4 

Whose influence is thine " 78 10 

Infold— infold him like a band VA 225 

Informer — This sour informer " 655 

Hence, thou suborn'd informer Son 125 13 

Infringed — with an infringed oath R L 1061 

Infusing- — Infusing them with 

dreadful prophecies V A 928 

Inliabit — inhabit on a living brow Son 68 4 

InUearse — thoughts in my brain . . . . " 86 3 

luherit — do inherit heaven's graces " 94 5 

Inheritor — inheritors of tlais excess " 146 7 

Iniquity — thy sword to guard .... R L 626 

What virtue breeds iniquity devours " 872 

justice feeds iniquity " ..... 1687 

self-living were iniquity Son 62 12 

Injurious — ransack'd by ... . theft R L 838 

injurious, shifting Time " 930 

Injurious distance should not Son 44 2 

With Time's injurious hand " 63 2 

Injury — than hate's known injury " 40 12 
Without accusing j'ou of injury " 58 8 
The injuries that to myself I do " 88 11 
dust and injury of age " 108 10 

That they elsewhere might dart 

their injuries " 139 12 
The injury of many L C 72 

Injustice — To chase injustice with 

revengeful arms R L 1693 

Inli — isaper, ink, and pen " 1289 

That in black ink Son 65 14 
that ink may character " 108 1 
Ink would have seem'd more 
black L C 54 

Innocence — And forth with bashful 

innocence doth hie R L 1341 

Inordinate — in him seem'd .... " 94 

Insinuate — she liumbly doth .... V A 1012 

Instance — no guilty instance gave R L 1511 

Instant — some special instant spe- 
cial blest Son 52 11 

Instead — Instead of love's coy touch iJ Z. 669 

Instigate — untimely thought did 

instigate " 43 

Instinct — As if by some instinct Son 50 7 

Instrument — some desperate .... R L 1038 

as frets upon an instrument " 1140 

' Poor instrument,' quoth she " 1464 

Insufficiency — With insufficiency my 

heart to sway Son 150 2 

Insult — While he insults o'er dull 

and speechless tribes " 107 12 

Insulter — what ransom the insulter 

willeth VA 550 

Insulting — under his .... falchion R L 509 



Insurrection — her subjects with foul 

insurrection R L 722 

Intelligence — gulls him with ... . S(jn 86 10 

Intend — to-morrow he intends V A 587 

Intend a zealous pilgrimage Son 27 6 
battery to the spheres intend L C 23 

Intending — Intending weariness 

with heavy sprite RL 121 

Intendment— do her intendments 

break VA 222 

Intent — brake oflT his late intent " 469 

with swift intent he goes R L 46 

Collatinus dream of my intent " 218 

blunt the sharp'st intents Son 115 7 

Interchange — . . . . each other's seat R L 70 

such interchange of state Son 64 9 

Interdict — From this session .... P T 9 

Interest — And one for interest VA 210 

thy interest was not bought R L 1067 

in the interest of thy bed " 1619 

My sorrow's interest " 1797 

As interest of the dead Son 31 7 

hath in this line some interest " 74 3 

Interim — Let this sad interim " 56 9 

Interlace — and there the painter in- 
terlaces Px.L 1390 

Intermix'd — best, if never Son 101 8 

Interpret — the eye interprets to the 

ear R L 1325 

Interrupted — her quiet interrupted " 1170 

Intituled — in that white intituled " 57 

Into — Into your idle over-handled 

theme VA 770 

Into the quiet closure " 782 

cast into eternal sleeping " 951 

Into the deep dark " 1033 

the smoke of it into his face R L 312 

Into the chamber wickedly he 

stalks '= 365 

there falls into thy boundless flood '' 653 

Into so bright a day " 1518 

that pour'st into my verse Son 38 2 
thrusts into his hide " 50 10 
into my deeds to pry " 61 6 
into the beauty of thy mind " 69 9 
should look into your moan " 71 13 
resolved my reason into tears L C 296 

Intrude — worm. ... the maiden bud ii i 848 

Inundation — the .... of the eyes L C 290 

Inured — Is not ....; return again RL 321 

Invasion — vows a league, and now 

invasion " 287 

Inveigli — No man inveigh against " 1254 

Invent — want subject to invent Son 38 1 
thy poet doth invent " 79 7 

Invention — can my invention make iS i 225 

Throng her inventions " 1302 

dost give invention light Son 38 8 

Which, labouring for invention " 59 3 
And keep invention " 76 6 

over-goes my blunt invention " 103 7 

is my invention spent " 105 11 

Invised — Whereto his invised prop- 
erties L C 212 

Invisible— That inward beauty and 

invisible VA 434 

on him, invisible commander " 1004 

O unseen shame, invisible dis- 
grace RL 827 



INVITE 



154 



IS 



Invite — Till now did ne'er invite L C 182 

IiiTited — desire to be invited Son 141 7 

Inviting— Where to the time " 124 8 

Invocate — which rhymers invooato " 38 10 
Invocation — Eoman gods with in- 
vocations R L 1831 

Invoked — So oft have I invoked thee Son 78 1 
Irnvard— That inward beauty and 

invisible VA 434 

Whose inward ill R L 91 

And in his inward mind " 185 

With inward vice " 1546 

vexation of his inward soul " 1779 

Neither in inward worth Son 16 11 

thine inward love of heart " 46 14 

grounded inward in my heart " 62 4 

To kiss the tender inward " 128 6 

Ireful — Being ireful, on the lion V A 628 

Iron — the iron bit he crusheth " 269 

enters at an iron gate R L 595 

and yet as iron rusty P P 1 4 

Is— 0, how quick is love VA 38 

The steed is stalled up " 39 

saith she is immodest " 53 

river that is rank " 71 

Still is he sullen " 75 

Her best is better'd " 78 

'Tis but a kiss I beg " 96 

sport is not in sight " ...... 124 

My flesh is soft " 142 

Love is a spirit all compact " 149 

Is love so light, sweet boy " 155 

Is thine own heart " 157 

to get it is thy duty " 168 

Still is left alive " 174 

what 'tis to love " 202 

Within this limit is relief " 235 

The time is spent " 255 

thus my strength is tried " 280 

breeder that is standing by " 282 

how he is enraged " 317 

When it is barr'd " 330 

An oven that is stopp'd " 331 

attorney once is mute " 335 

that she is so nigh " 341 

My day's delight is past, my horse 

is gone . " 380 

And 'tis your fault " 381 

Is how to get my palfrey " ..... 384 

Affection is a coal " 387 

Who is so faint " 401 

lesson is but plain " 407 

'Tis much to borrow " 411 

is love but to disgrace it " „412 

For I have heard it is " 413 

The colt that's back'd " 419 

where a heart is hard " 426 

is hush'd before it raineth " 458 

believing she is dead " 467 

now is turn'd to day " 481 

So is her face illumined " 486 

What hour is this " 495 

the plague is banish'd " 510 

What is ten hundred " 519 

Is twenty hundred " 522 

is sour to taste " 528 

shrieks, — 'tis very late " 531 

fee of parting tender'd is " 538 

roe that's tired with chasing " 561 



Is— his choice is froward VA 570 


yet 'tis pluck'd 


" 574 


She is resolved 


" 579 


is she in the very lists 


" 595 


All is imaginary 


" 597 


is her annoy 


" 599 


She's Love, she loves, and yet she 




is not loved 


" 610 


know'st not what it is 


" 615 


whate'er is in his way 


" 623 


is trodden on by many 


" 707 


The night is spent 


" 717 


and now 'tis dark 


" 719 


all is but to rob thee 


" 723 


What is thy body 


" 757 


so fair a hope is slain 


'• 762 


Gold that's put to use 


" 768 


The kiss I gave you is bestow'd 


" 771 


tempting tune is blown 


" 778 


The path is smooth 


" 788 


When reason is the bawd 


" 792 


Love to heaven is fled 


" 793 


is tempest after sun 


" 800 


Love is all truth 


" 804 


The text is old 


" 806 


My face is full of shame 


" 808 


deeply is redoubled 


" 832 


How love is wise 


" 838 


' 'Tis so :' they answer all, ' 'Tis so 


" 851 


morning is so much o'erworn 


" 866 


it is DO gentle chase 


" 883 


'tis a causeless fantasy 


" 897 


is mated with delays 


" 909 


Thy mark is feeble age 


" 941 


her best work is ruin'd 


" 954 


But none is best 


" 971 


it is Adonis' voice 


" 978 


Who is but drunken 


" 984 


Death is not to blame 


" 992 


but is still severe 


" 1000 


'Tis not my fault 


" 1003 


'Tis be, foul creature 


" 1005 


that Adonis is alive 


" 1009 


with him is beauty slain 


" 1019 


he is not dead 


" 1060 


Her voice is stopp'd 


" 1061 


several limb is doubled 


" 1067 


Whose tongue is music now 


" 1077 


What face remains alive that's 




worth 


' 1076 


'Tis true, 'tis true 


" 1111 


But he is dead 


" 1119 


and that is cold 


' 1124 


this is my spite 


' 1133 


where is no cause 


' 1153 


matter is to fire 


' 1162 


is reft from her by death 


' 1174 


And so 'tis thine; but know, it is 




as good 


' 1181 


And 'tis thy right 


' 1184 


quickly is convey'd 


' 1192 


As is the morning's silver-melting 




dew R L 24 


that which is so singular 


' .32 


Or why is Collatine 


' 33 


because it is his own 


' 35 


For then is Tarquin brought 


' 120 


treasure is the meed projiosed 


' 132 


there's no death supposed 


' 133 



IS 



155 



IS 



Is — Is but to surfeit JR L 139 

is but to nurse the life " 141 

there is such thwarting strife " 143 

Then wliere is truth " 158 

Is madly toss'd " 171 

that w'liich is divine " 193 

my digression is so vile " 202 

as he is my kinsman " 237 

' Sliameful it is " 239 

Hateful it is ; there is no hate in 

loving " 240 

but she is not lier own " 241 

The worst is but denial " 242 

My will is strong " 243 

That what is vile shows like " 252 

Affection is my captain " 271 

when his gaudy banner is display'd " 272 

My part is youth " 278 

Desire my pilot is " 279 

Is almost choked " 282 

Is not inured " ^21 

Now is he come " 337 

My will is back'd " 352 

sin is clear'd " 354 

The eye of heaven is out " 356 

By their high treason is his heart 

misled " 369 

Whether it is that she reflects " 376 

her head entombed is " 390 

she is dreadfully beset " 444 

What terror 'tis, but she " 453 

the fault is thine " 482 

But will is deaf " 495 

The fault unknown is as a thought 

unacted " 527 

The poisonous simple sometime is 

compacted " 530 

His venom in effect is purified " 532 

eloquence with sighs is mixed " 563 

He is no woodman " .... 580 

My husband is thy friend " 582 

Thy sea within a puddle's womb 

is hearsed " 657 

Pure Chastity is rifled " 692 

While Lust is in his pride " 705 

his soul's fair temple is defaced " 719 

he is but Night's child " 785 

To cipher what is writ " 811 

That is as clear " 825 

Eeproach is stamp'd " 829 

he in peace is wounded " 831 

by strong assault it is bereft " 835 

When virtue is profaned " 847 

perfection is so absolute " 853 

Is plagued with cramps " 856 

we can say is ours " 873 

thy guilt is great " 876 

'Tis thou that executest " 877 

'Tis thou that spurn'st " 880 

when temperance is thaw'd " 884 

Justice is feasting " 906 

Advice is sporting " 907 

Time's office is to fine " 936 

I Time's glory is to calm " 939 

'The baser is he " 1002 

The mightier is the thing " 1004 

The moon being clouded presently 

is miss'd " 1007 

Since that my case is past the help " 1022 



Is— Is to let forth my foul defiled 

blood R I, X029 

' 0, that is gone " 1051 

For day hath nought to do what's 

done by night " 1092 

True grief is fond . " 1094 

her grief is dumb " 1105 

Sometime 'tis mad " 1106 

Grief best is pleased " mi 

then is feelingly sufficed " 1112 

it is sympathized " 1113 

'Tis double death to drown " 1114 

time is kejit " 1127 

is she in mutiny " 1153 

When life is shamed " 1155 

whose whole is swallow'd in con- 
fusion « 1159 

Her house is sack'd " 1170 

'Tis honour to deprive " 1186 

mine honour is new-born " 1190 

Is form'd in them " 1243 

Wherein is stamp'd the semblance " 1246 

Is worthy blame " 1257 

For more it is than I can well ex- 
press " 12S6 

When more is felt " 12S8 

Her maid is gone " 1296 

What wit sets down is blotted 

straight " 1299 

This is too curious-good " 1300 

when he is by " 1318 

'Tis but a part of sorrow " 1328 

Her letter now is seal'd " 1331 

vassal scarce is gone " 1360 

For now 'tis stale to sigh " 1362 

Before the which is drawn the 

power of Greece " 1368 

is Lucrece come " 1443 

where all distress is stell'd " 1444' 

subtle Sinon here is painted " 1541 

patience is quite beaten " 1563 

Her honour is ta'en prisoner " 1608 

thy Lucrece is not free " 1624 

when the judge is robb'd " 1652 

and spotless is my mind " 1656 

But wretched as he is " 1665 

From what is past " 1685 

For 'tis a meritorious fair design " 1692 

What is the quality " 1702 

' He, he, fair lords, 'tis he " 1721 

at that which is so putrified " 1750 

now Lucrece is unlived " 1754 

'She's mine.' ' O, mine she is " 1795 

'tis mine that she hath kill'd " 1803 

is woe the cure for woe " 1821 

Is it revenge to give thyself a blow " 1823 

Now is the time Son 3 2 

For where is she so fair "35 

Or who is he so fond "37 

That use is not forbidden "65 

Is it for fear to wet a widow's eye "91 
But that thou none lovest is most 

evident " 10 4 
Be, as thy presence is, gracious 

and kind " 10 11 

Thy end is truth's " 14 14 

it is but as a tomb " 17 3 

And often is his gold " IS 6 

as is false women's fashion " 20 4 



IS 

Is — So is it not with, me <S'o?i 

my love, is as fair 

Is but the seemly raiment " 
when mine is slain 
Who with his fear is put besides 

his part 
My body is the frame wherein 'tis 

held " 

it is best painter's art " 
Which in my bosom's shop is 

hanging still 
Is from the book of honour razed 

quite 
day's oppression is not eased by 

night 

Thy bosom is endeared " 
That due of many now is thine 

alone 
'Tis not enough that through " 
Thy adverse party is thy advocate " 
civil war is in my love " 
there is but one respect " 
mine is thy good report " 
Look, what is best " 
For who's so dumb " 
And what is't but my own " 
it is a greater grief " 
it is not all my grief " 
That she hath thee, is of my wail- 
ing chief " 
my loss is my love's gain " 
But here's the joy ■ " 
this title is impanneled " 
verdict is determined " 
mine eye's due is thine outward 

part 
Betwixt mine eye and heart a 

league is took " 

mine eye is famish'd for a look " 

mine eye is my heart's guest " 

of posting is no need " 

So is the time " 

What is your substance " 

Is poorly imitated " 

virtue only is their show " 

by feeding is allay'd " 

So true a fool is love " 

your charter is so strong " 

but that which is " 

Is it thy will " 

Is it thy spirit " 
thy love, though much, is not so 

great " 

It is my love " 

there is no remedy " 

It is so grounded " 

no face so gracious is as mine " 

'Tis thee,' myself, that " 

This thought is as a death " 

Whose action is no stronger " 

since his rose is true " 

now Nature bankrupt is " 

Thus is his cheek the map " 

with ovitward praise is crown'd " 

The soil is this " 
The ornament of beauty is suspect " 

where my body is " 

which is his due " 

My spirit is thine " 



156 



IS 



24 


3 


24 


4 


24 


7 


25 


11 


28 


3 


31 


1 


31 


12 


34 


5 


35 


10 


35 


12 


36 


5 


36 


14 


37 


12 


38 


7 


39 


4 


40 


11 


42 


1 


42 


3 


42 


9 


42 


13 


46 


9 


46 


11 



47 


1 


47 


3 


47 


7 


51 


4 


52 


9 


53 


1 


53 


6 


54 


9 


56 


3 


57 


13 


58 


9 


59 


1 


61 


1 


61 


5 


61 


9 


61 


10 


62 


3 


62 


4 


62 


5 


62 


13 


64 


13 


65 


4 


67 


8 


67 


9 


68 


1 


69 


5 


69 


14 


70 


3 


72 


11 


74 


7 


74 


8 



Is — is that which it contains <S 

And that is this 
and his wealth is found 
Save what is had 
Why is my verse so barren 
all my best is dressing old words 

new 
what is already spent 
the sun is daily new 
So is my love still telling what is 

told 
whose iniiuence is thine 
wide as the ocean is 
in thee it is abused 
Who is it that says most 
immured is the store 
what in you is writ 
I say, 'tis so, 'tis true 
But that is in my thought 
where is my deserving 
The cause of this fair gift in me is 

wanting 
my patent back again is swerving 
Such is my love 
while the world is bent 
Thy love is better 
Is writ in moods 
ilower is to the summer sweet 
thy fault is youth 
thy grace is youth 
mine is thy good report 
'tis with so dull a cheer 
But best is best 
My love is strengthen'd 
That love is merchandized 
the summer is less pleasant now 
argument, all bare, is of more 

worth 
Kind is my love to-day 
'Fair, kind, and true' is all my 

argument 
in this change is my invention 

spent 
What's in the brain 
What's new to speak 
That is my home of love 
Alas, 'tis true 

sold cheap what is most dear 
true it is that I have look'd 
Now all is done 
my nature is subdued 
your pity is enough to cure 
mine eye is iu my mind 
and is partly blind 
but effectually is out 
O, 'tis the first ; 'tis iiattery 
what with his gust is 'greeing 
'tis the lesser sin 
Love is a babe 
Love is not love 
it is an ever-fixed mark 
and is never shaken 
It is the star 
Whose worth's unknown 
Love's not Time's fool 
That better is by evil 
when it is built anew 
'Tis better to be vile 
which is so deemed 



74 


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14 


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12 


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13 


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10 


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5 


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9 


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11 


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6 


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7 


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8 


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2 


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9 


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9 


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8 


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1 


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1 


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9 


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6 


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14 


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1 


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3 


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4 


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9 


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11 


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13 


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2 


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5 


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10 


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3 



IS 



157 



IT 



Is — foist upon us that is old Son 123 6 
Which is not mix'd " 125 11 
her quietus is to render tliee " 126 12 
But now is black beauty's succes- 
sive heir " 127 3 
But is profaned " 127 8 
Is lust in action " 129 2 
Is perjured, murderous " 129 3 
Coral is far more red " 130 2 
is there more delight " 130 7 
that is not false I swear " 131 9 
Thy black is fairest " 131 12 
beauty herself is black " 132 13 
Is't not enough " 133 3 
and all that is in me " 133 14 
confess'd that he is thine " 134 1 
art covetous and he is kind " 134 6 
whose will is large and spacious " 135 5 
And will, thy soul knows, is ad- 
mitted there " 136 3 
Among a number one is reckon'd 

none " 136 8 

for my name is 'Will " 136 14 

They know what beauty is " 137 3 

what the best is take the worst to be " 137 4 
Whereto the judgement of my 

heart is tied " 137 8 

say this is not " 137 11 

that she is made of truth " 138 1 

thus is simple truth supprest " 138 8 
But wherefore says she not she is 

unjust " 138 9 

love's best habit is in seeming trust " 138 11 

Is more than my o'er-press'd " 139 8 

world is grown so bad " 140 11 

But 'tis my heart that loves " 141 3 
Who, in despite of view, is pleased 

to dote " 141 4 

Love is my sin " 142 1 

■whose busy care is spent " 143 6 

The better angel is a man right fair " 144 3 

From heaven to hell is flown away " 145 12 

is this thy body's end " 14fi 8 

My love is as a fever " 147 1 

Desire is death " 147 8 

now reason is past care " 147 9 

where is my judgement fled " 148 3 

to say it is not so " 148 6 

Love's eye is not so true " 148 8 

That is so vex'd " 148 10 

That is so proud " 149 10 

There is such strength " 150 7 
Love is too young to know what 

conscience is " 151 1 

conscience is born of love " 151 2 

He is contented '• 151 11 

faith in thee is lost " 152 8 

'Tis i^romised in the charity L C 70 

But, woe is me " 78 

What's sweet to do " 88 

'twixt May and April is to see " 102 

advice is often seen " 160 

'It is thy last " 168 

This man's untrue " 169 

That's to ye sworn " 180 

neither party is nor true nor kind " 186 

That is, to you my origin and ender " 222 

what labour is't to leave " 239 

in that my boast is true " 246 



Is — AVhat breast so cold that is not 

warmed here L C 292 

nature is both kind and tame " 311 

that she is made of truth P P 1 1 
my love that she is young "19 

love's best habit is a soothing tongue " 1 11 

My better angel is'a man right fair " 2 3 
breath a vapour is "39 

in thee it Is " 3 11 

it is no fault of mine " 3 12 

what fool is not so wise " 3 13 
Well learned is thai tongue "58 

Which is to me some praise " 5 10 
Which, not to anger bent, is music 

and sweet fire " 5 12 
Fair is my love "71 
and yet, as glass is, brittle "73 
Dowland to thee is dear "85 
whose deep conceit is such "87 

One god is god of both " 8 13 
Youth is full of pleasance, age is 

full of care " 12 2 
Youth is full of sport, age's breath 

is short " 12 5 

Youth is nimble, age is lame " 12 6 
Youth is hot and bold, age is weak 

and cold " 12 7 

Youth is wild, and age is tame " 12 8 

my love is young " 12 10 
Beauty is but a vain and doubtful 

good " 13 1 
A brittle glass that's broken pres- 
ently " 13 4 
beauty blemish'd once's for ever lost " 13 11 
now my song is ended " 16 16 
All is amiss " 18 4 
All my lady's love is lost " 18 10 
There a nay is placed without re- 
move " 18 12 
Heart is bleeding " 18 23 
■ sport from us is fled " 18 47 
our love is lost, for Love is dead " 18 48 
I see that there is none " 18 54 
There is no heaven • "i 19 45 
King Pandion he is dead " 21 23 
Is no friend in misery " 21 32 
He that is thy friend " 21 51 

constancy is dead P T 22 

Death is now the phoenix' nest " 56 

Beauty brag, but 'tis not she " 63 

Island— Who, like a late-sack'd RL 1740 

Issue — Sweet issue of a more sweet- 
smelling sire V A 1178 

this proud issue of a king R L 87 

Thy issue blurr'd " 522 

When your sweet issue Son 13 8 

Yet this abundant issue " 97 9 

Issueless — ^Ah ! if thou issueless "93 

It — in her passion, calls it balm V A 27 

And calls it heavenly " 64 

Perforce will force it " 72 

'Tis but a kiss I beg " 96 

■were it with thy hand felt " 143 

sweet boy, and may it be " 155 

thou shouldst think it " 156 

to get it is thy duty " 163 

What 'tis to love " 202 

I'll give it thee again " 209 

When it is barr'd " 33fl 



IT 



158 



IT 



It— O, wh&t a sight it was VA 343 

It flash'd forth fire " 348 

dost thou feel it " 373 

tliou shalt have it " 374 

O, give it me, lest thy hard heart 

do steel it " 375 

can never grave it " 376 

And 'tis your fault " 381 

it will set the heart " 388 

nor will not know it " 409 

Unless it be a boar, and then I 

chase it " 410 

'Tis much to borrow, and I will 

not owe it " 411 

is love but to disgrace it " 412 

for I have heard it is " 413 

it will not ope the gate " 424 

hush'd before it raineth " 458 

before it staineth " 460 

clapping makes it red " 468 

shrieks, 'tis very late " 531 

yet 'tis pluck'd " 574 

it will not be " 607 

Know'st not what it is " 615 

was it not white " 643 

The thought of it " 669 

teach it divination " 670 

and now 'tis dark " 719 

Making it subject " 737 

you do it for increase " 791 

Call it not love " 793 

blotting it with blame " 796 

whereat it groans " 829 

"Tis so :' they answer all, "Tis so " 851 

hears them chant it " 869 

it is no gentle chase " 883 

Through which it enters " 890 

'tis a causeless fantasy " 897 

And, sighing it again " 930 

no, it cannot be " 937 

shouldst strike at it " 938 

yes, it may; thou hast " 939 

it is Adonis' voice " 978 

scorning it should pass " 982 

how strange it seems " 985 

It was not she " 993 

'Tis not my fault " 1003 

'Tis he, foul creature " 1005 

she treads on it so light " 1028 

wind would blow it oft" " 1089 

on it their golden gills " 1100 

'Tis true, 'tis true " 1111 

it shall be waited on " 1137 

it shall be fickle " 1141 

shall it make most weak " 1145 

It shall be sparing " 1147 

shall it keep in quiet . " 1149 

It shall be raging-mad " 1151 

It shall suspect " 1153 

It shall not fear where it should 

most mistrust " 1154 

It shall be merciful " 1155 

when it seems most just " 1156 

it shall be where it shows " 1157 

It shall be cause " 1159 

Comparing it to her Adonis' " 1172 

•bosom it shall dwell " 1173 

And so 'tis thine ; but know it is 

as good " 1181 



It— And 'tis thy right VA 1184 

because it is his own JR. L 35 

call'd it then their shield " 61 

thus to use it " 62 

it should be kill'd " 74 

unloose it from their bond " 136 

by augmenting it " 154 

and lend it not " 190 

That it will live " 203 

hold it for no sin " 209 

' Shameful it is " 239 

Hateful it is " 240 

Forced it to tremble " 261 

then it faster rock'd " 262 

blows the smoke of it " 312 

He takes it from the rushes where 

it lies " 318 

And griping it " 319 

"Whether it is that she reflects " 376 

What terror 'tis " 453 

beat it dead " 489 

was it newly bred " 490 

To soften it " 591 

wherein it shall discern " 619 

him that gave it thee " 624 

For it was lent thee " 627 

how vile a spectacle it were " 631 

For there it revels " 713 

So fares it " 715 

And bids it leap from thence, 

where it may find " 760 

it is bereft " 835 

For it had been dishonour " 844 

that it cannot cure " 861 

'So then he hath it when he can- 
not use it " 862 

And leaves it to be master'd " 863 

presently abuse it " 864 

'Tis thou that executest " 877 

'Tis thou that spurn'st " 880 

How comes it then " 895 

where it lay " 1057 

Sometime 'tis mad " 1106 

with like semblance it is sympa- 
thized " 1113 

'Tis double death to drown " 1114 

would do it good " 1117 

Who, if it wink " 1139 

alack, what were it " 1156 

with greater patience bear it " 1158 

Then let it not be call'd " 1174 

'Tis honour to deprive " 1186 

read it in me " 1195 

thou shalt see it " 1205 

life's fair end shall free it " 1208 

'So be it " 1209 

0, let it not be hild " 1257 

it small avails my mood " 1273 

' if it should be told " 1284 

cannot make it less " 1285 

For more it is " 1286 

prepare to carry it " 1294 

it will soon be writ " 1295 

Lest he should hold it " " 1315 

that it doth behold " 1326 

'Tis but a part of sorrow " 1328 

and on it writ " 1331 

and she delivers it " 1333 

God wot, it was defect " 1345 



IT 



159 



IT 



It— but do it leisurely RL 1349 

For now 'tis stale to sigh " 1362 

As heaven it seem'd " 1872 

That it beguiled attention " 140-4 

In speech, it seem'd " 1405 

It seem'd they would debate " 1421 

' It cannot be,' quoth she " 1534 

'It cannot be' she in that sense " 1538 

And turn'd it thus, ' It cannot be, 

I find " 1539 

yet it seldom sleeps " 1574 

how slow it creeps " 1575 

It easeth some, though none it 

ever cured " 1581 

all the task it hath to say " 1618 

let it then suffice \ " 1679 

For 'tis a meritorious fair design " 1692 

carved in it with tears " 1713 

'He, he, fair lords, 'tis he " 1721 

That blow did bail it " 1725 

prison where it breathed " 1726 

and, as it left the place " 1735 

revenge, held it in chase " 1736 

from her breast, it doth divide " 1737 

till it blow up rain " 1788 

to make it more " 1789 

At last it rains " 1790 

'tis mine that she hath kill'd " 1803 

Is it revenge to give thyself a blow " 1823 

thou feel'st it cold S<m 2 14 
Nor it, nor no remembrance what 

it was " 5 12 

ere it be self-kill'd "64 

be it ten for one "68 

is it for fear "91 

the world enjoys it " 9 10 

user so destroys it " 9 12 

if it shall go well " 14 7 

if it were flll'd " 17 2 

it is but as a tomb " 17 3 

in it and in my rhyme ' " 17 14 

whereupon it gazeth " 20 6 

So is it not with me " 21 1 

the frame wherein 'tis held " 24 3 

it is best painter's art " 24 4 

words to show it " 26 6 

all naked, will bestow it " 26 8 

'tis not enough that through ■ " 34 5 

though it alter not " 36 7 

doth it steal sweet hours " 36 8 

And what is't but mine own " 39 4 

Were it not thy sour leisure " 39 10 

it is a greater grief " 40 11 

it is not all my grief " 42 1 

yet it may be said " 42 2 

recounting it to me " 45 12 

it might uneased stay " 48 3 

from the thing it was " 49 7 

but fairer we it deem " 54 3 

which doth in it live " 54 4 

he it not said " 56 1 

Or call it winter " 66 13 

to you it doth belong " 58 11 

be it ill or well " 58 14 

Is it thy will " 61 1 

Is it thy spirit " 61 5 

It is ray love " 61 10 

It is so grounded " 32 4 

'Tis thee, myself, that " 62 13 



It — which it fears to lose & 

The hand that writ it ' 

whereon it must expire ' 

which it was nourish'd by ' 

that which it contains ' 

and pays it thee again ' 

And found it in thy cheek ' 

in thee it is abused ' 

Who is it that says most ' 

I say ' 'Tis so, 'tis true ' 

Was it the proud full sail ' 

Was it his spirit ' 

gavest it, else mistaking ' 

should do it wrong ' 

Wlierein it finds a joy ' 

For it depends upon ' 

and yet I know it not ' 

Though to itself it only live ' 

'tis with so dull a cheer ' 

Yet seem'd it winter still ' 

or colour it had stol'n ' 
Excuse not silence so, for't lies in 

thee ' 

greet it with my lays ' 

when it hath \aj added praise ' 

Were it not sinful then ' 

when you look in it ' 

would show it dead ' 
it could so preposterously be stain'd ' 

in it thou art my all ' 

Alas, 'tis true ' 

Most true it is ' 

Thence comes it that ' 

To what it works in ' 

For it no form delivers ' 

which it doth latch ' 

holds what it doth catch ' 

For if it see the rudest ' 

it shapes them to your feature ' 

taught it this alchemy ' 

O, 'tis the first, 'tis flattery .' 

most kingly drinks it up ' 
If it he poison'd, 'tis the lesser sin ' 

That mine eye loves it ' 

when it alteration finds ' 

it is an ever-fixed mark ' 

It is the star ' 

But bears it out even ' 
Whilst it hath thought 

when it is built anew ' 

'Tis better to be vile ' 

It might for Fortune's bastard ' 

No, it was builded ' 

It suffers not in smiling ' 

It fears not policy ' 

That it nor grows ' 

Were 't ought to me I bore ' 
Or if it were, it bore not beauty's 

name ' 
I swear it to myself alone 
O, let it then as well 

deep wound it gives ' 

Is't not to torture me ' 
fill it full with wills 

so it please thee hold ' 
see where it lies 
If I might teach thee wit, better 

it were 
But 'tis my heart that loves 



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6 


73 


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12 


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84 


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85 


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86 


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11 


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10 


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6 


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4 


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9 


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14 


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11 


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14 


110 


1 


110 


5 


111 


5 


111 


7 


113 


5 


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6 


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8 


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9 


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12 


114 


4 


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9 


114 


10 


114 


13 


114 


14 


116 


3 


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5 


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7 


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12 


119 


6 


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11 


121 


1 


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2 


124 


5 


124 


6 


124 


9 


124 


12 


125 


1 


127 


2 


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8 


132 


10 


133 


2 


133 


3 


186 


6 


136 


11 


137 


3 


140 


5 


141 


3 



IT 



160 



lOY 



It — ^it merits not reproving Soyi 142 4 

Or, if it do, not from those lips " 142 o 

Be it lawful I love thee " 142 9 

that, when it grows " 142 11 

taught it thus anew " 145 8 

foUow'd it as gentle day " I'io 10 

to say it is not so " 148 6 

If it he not, then love " 148 7 

How can it? O, how can " 148 9 

hold it that I call " 151 13 

think sometime it saw L C 10 

Which on it had " 16 

what contents it bears " 19 

'Tis promised in the charity " 70 

Let it not tell your judgement " 73 

it was to gain my grace " 79 

the web it seem'd to wear " 95 

If best were as it was " 98 

in it put their mind " 135 

' Nor gives it satisfaction " 162 

That we must curb it " 163 

and cry "It is thy last " 168 

why, 'twas beautiful and hard " 211 

what labour is 't to leave " 239 

the suffering pangs it bears " 272 

Feeling it break " 275 

as it best deceives " 306 

vapour vow ; in thee it is PP 3 11 

then it is no fault of mine " 3 12 

■when iirst it 'gins to bud " 13 3 

'T may be, she joy'd " 14 9 

'T may be, again to make me " 14 10 

It was a lording's daughter " 16 1 

alas, it was a spite " 16 7 

she could not help it " 16 12 

ere it be day " 19 17 

had not had it then " 19 24 

bullet beats it down " 19 30 

heard it said full oft " 19 41 

here be it said " 19 53 

it fell upon a day " 21 1 

to hear it was great pity " 21 12 

in them it were a wonder P T 82 

That it cried, How true " 45 

"Whereupon it made " 49 

'Twas not^their infirmity " 60 

It was married chastity " 61 

Beauty brag, but 'tis not she " 63 

Italy— in the fields of fruitful Italy R L 107 

Itself— Beauty within itself T',4 130 

Beauty itself doth of itself R L 29 

Wounding itself to death " 466 

That jealousy itself " 1516 

fountain clears itself again " 1707 

Who heaven itself for ornament 

doth use Son 21 3 

Or state itself confounded " 64 10 

lace itself with his society " 67 4 
Without all ornament, itself and 

true " 68 10 

to itself it only live and die " 94 10 

thought itself so blessed never " 119 6 

The sun itself sees not " 148 12 

Reason in itself confounded P T 41 

Ivory- Of this ivory pale VA 230 

ivory in an alabaster band " 363 

Her breasts, like ivory globes R L 407 

to batter such an ivory wall " 464 

Like ivory conduits " 1234 



Ivy- A belt of straw and ivy buds P P 20 13 

Jack — Do I envy those jacks Son 128 5 

Since saucy jack^ so hajspy are " 128 13 

Jade — How like a jade he stood VA 391 

Till, like a jade RL 707 

thus shall excuse my jade Son 51 12 

Jar — he comes in every jar VA 100 

Javelin — With javelin's point " 616 

Jaw — from the fierce tiger's jaws Son 19 3 

Jealous — Jealous of catching V A 321 

Let not the jealous day R L 800 

question with my jealous thought Son 57 9 

Jealousy — Jealousy, that sour un- 
welcome guest V A 449 

Love reigns, disturbing Jealousy " 649 

dissentious Jealousy " 657 

waited on with jealousy " 1137 

That jealousy itself RL 1516 

tenour of thy jealousy Son 61 8 

Jeering — As silly-jeering idiots are 

with kings R L 1812 

Jennet — A breeding jennet VA 260 

Jest — dally, smile, and jest R L 106 

Death, I did but jest " , 997 

But smile and jest P P 4 12 

she joy'd to jest " 14 9 

Jesting — and all were jestings " 7 12 

Jet — and of beaded jet L C 37 

Jewel — Torches are made to light, 

jewels to wear V A 163 

jewel in the flood " 824 

Of that rich jewel R L 34 

of that dear jewel I have lost " 1191 

a jewel hung in ghastly night Son 27 11 
to whom my jewels trifles are " 48 5 
Or captain jewels in the carcanet " 52 8 
Shall Time's best jewel " 65 10 
The basest jewel " 96 6 
fairest and most precious jewel " 131 4 
Of this false jewel L C 154 

Jig — All my merry jigs P P 18 9 

Jocund— their leader's jocund show P i 296 

Join— join they all together VA 971 

They join and shoot their foam R L 1442 

Join with the spite of fortune Son 90 3 

Joined— how often hath she joined P P 1 7 

Joint — ray joints did tremble V A 642 

her joints forget to bow " 1061 

my frail joints shake R L 227 

sets every joint a-shaking " 452 

Jointed— Round-hoof 'd, short -joint- 
ed, fetlocks shag VA 295 

Jointly — All jointly listening R L 1410 

Then jointly to the gi-ound " 1840 

Jollity— needy nothing trimm'd in 

joility Son 66 3 

Jot — be any jot diminish'd V A 417 

Journey — a journey in my head Son 27 3 
How heavy do I journey " 50- 1 

Jove— 'O Jove,' quoth she VA 1015 

by high almighty Jove R L 568 

Thine eye Jove's lightning seems P P 5 11 
' O Jove,' quoth she " 6 14 

Thou for whom Jove would swear " 17 15 
And deny himself for Jove " '17 17 

Joy — on presented joy V A 405 

and death was lively joy " 498 

and to lack her joy " 600 



JOY 



161 



KILL'D 



Joy — joy bids her rejoice VA 977 

Her joy with heaved-up hand Ji L Ill 

a froth of fleeting joy " 212 

Must sell her joy " 385 

joy breeds months of pain " 690 

thy joy to grief " 889 

that tune their memory's joy " 1107 

Trojan mothers sharing joy " 1-131 

tlieir liglit joy seemed to appear " 1434 

joy delights in joy Son 8 2 
But here's the joy " 42 13 
and my joy behind " 50 14 
a joy above tlie rest " 91 6 
Before, a joy proposed " 129 12 
Were kisses all the joys in bed P P 19 47 
Joy — Unlook'd-for joy in that I hon- 
our most Son 25 4 
This told I joy ; but then no longer 
glad ' " 45 13 
Joy'd — she joy'd to jest PP 14 9 

Joyless — While with a joyless smile P Z/ 1711 

Judge — Being judge in love V A 220 

My bloody judge forbade R L 1648 

And when the judge is robb'd " 1G52 

Judgement — do I my . . .•. pluck Son 14 1 

So, till the judgement " 55 13 

on better judgement making " 87 12 

Yet then my judgement , " 115 3 

in my judgement's place " 131 12 

the judgement of my heart " 137 8 

■where is my judgement fled " 148 3 

Let it not tell your judgement LC 73 

from judgement stand aloof " IfiC 

Juice — lean and lacking juice V A 136 

Jump — To jump up higher seem'd R L 1414 

can jump both sea and land Son 44 7 

June— in three hot Junes burn'd " 104 7 

Juno — Juno but an Ethiope were P P 17 16 

Just — Now was she just before him V A 349 

fatal folds just in his way " 879 

when it seems most just " 1156 

to find a stranger just R L 159 

a show so seeming just " 1514 

Just to the time Son 109 7 

And on just proof " 117 10 

And the just pleasure lost " 121 3 

and see just cause of hate " 150 10 

Justice — Justice is feasting RL 906 

might plead for justice there " 1649 

For sparing justice feeds iniquity " 1087 

Justify — call me not to justify the 

wrong Son 139 1 

Justly — And justly thus controls R L 189 

One justly weeps " 1235 

Keen— edge on his keen appetite RL 9 

Pluck the keen teeth Son 19 3 
to make our appetites more keen " 118 1 

to make our wits more l^een L C 161 

Keep — Love keeps his revels V A 123 

keep his loathsome cabin " 637 

keep witli thy hounds " 678 

earth-delving conies keep " 687 

shall it keep in quiet " 1149 

he should keep unknown R L 34 

and keep themselves enclosed " 378 

Keep still possession " 803 

keep them from thy aid " 912 

To keep thy sharp woes waking " 1136 

11 



Keep— keep him from heart-easing 

words R L 1782 

private widow well may keep Son 9 7 

yourself keeps yourself still " 16 13 

which I will keep so chary " 22 11 

keep my drooping eyelids " 27 7 

with my desire keep pace " 51 9 

that keeps you as my chest " 52 9 

thy image should keep open " 61 1 

that keeps mine eye awake " 61 10 

And keep invention " 76 6 

To keep an adjunct " 122 13 

She keeps thee to this purpose " 126 7 

but not still keep, her treasure " 126 10 

'\Vhoe'er keeps me " 133 11 

that vow'd chaste life to keep " 154 3 

Keep the obsequy so strict P T 12 

Keep'st — with tears thou keep'st me 

blind Son 148 13 

Keeping— Cave-keeping evils that 

obscurely sleep R L 1250 

Ken — to drown in ken of shore " 1114 

Kennell'd — kennell'd in a brake V A 913 

Kept — twenty locks kept fast " 575 

by a painted cloth be kept in aweP L 245 

dear love be kejit unspotted " 821 

which thy chaste bee kept " 840 

when time is kept with tears " 1127 

both were kept for heaven " 1166 

And kept unused Son 9 12 

till now never kept seat in one " 105 14 

his prescriptions are not kept " 147 6 

Kept hearts in liveries L C 195 

But kept cold distance " 237 

that kept my rest away P P 14 2 

Key — as the rich, whose blessed key Son 52 1 

Key -cold — in key -cold Lucrece' 

bleeding stream R L 1774 

Kill— For looks kill love VA 464 

thou didst kill me: kill me once 

again " 499 

butcher, bent to kill " 618 

dothcry 'Kill, kill! • "■ 652 

the other kills thee quickly " 990 

murder wakes to stain and kill R L 168 

doth confound and kill " 250 

this blessed league to kill " 383 

To kill thine honour " 516 

all that brood to kill " 627 

Or kills his life " 875 

seek every hour to kill " 998 

Kill both thyself and her " 1036 

' To kill myself,' quoth she " 1156 

will kill myself, thy foe " 1196 

act of lust, and so did kill " 1636 

Kill me with spites Son 40 14 

But, ah, thought kills me " 44 9 
To-morrow see again and do not 

kill " 56 7 

and wretched minutes kill " 126 8 

no fair beseechers kill " 135 13 

Kill me outright with looks " 139 14 

or kill the gallant knight P P 16 6 

Kill'd— and hath kill'd him so VA 1110 

I should have kill'd him " 1118 

by her side lay kill'd " 1165 

between them both it should be 

kill'd R L 74 

kill'd my son or sire " 232 



KILL'D 



162 



KNIFE 



457 
1255 
1593 
1803 
4 



540 
764 
998 
1018 

1147 
1242 
1435 



Kill'd— Like to a new-kill'd bird R L . 
that the flower hath kill'd " . 

kill'd with deadly cares " . 

'tis mine that She hath kill'd " . 

ere it be self-kill'd Son 

kill'd too soon by death's sharp 
sting PP 

Killiiigr— a cockatrice' dead-killing 
eye R L 

O comfort-killing Night " 

Kind— I felt a kind of fear VA 

overthrow of mortal kind " 

stern sad tunes, to change their 

kinds R L 

the impression of strange kinds " 
a kind of heavy fear " 

but in a kind of praise Son 

besiege all kinds of blood " 

found a kind of meetness " 

All kind of arguments L C 

JKnci— Beating his kind embrace- 
ments VA 

deceitful, so compact, so kind R L 
presence is, gracious and kind Son 
although their eyes were kind " 

Kind is my love to-day, to-morrow 

kind " 

Fair, kind, and true " 

Fair, kind, and true " 

Fair, kind, and true " 

covetous and he is kind " 

kiss Tne, be kind " 

is nor true nor kind L C 

Their kind acceptance " 

fair nature is both kind and tame " 

Kinder— Grew kinder, and his fury VA 318 

Kind-liearted— at least .... prove Son 10 12 

KiiuUe— She seeks to kindle VA 606 

Kindled— His kindled duty kindled 

her mistrust R L 1352 

Thy eye kindled the fire " 1475 

Kindling— his love-kindling fire 

did quickly steep Son 153 3 

Kindly— She took me kindly by the 

hand R L 

Kindness — with public kindness 

honour me Son 36 11 

deep oaths of thy deep kindness " 152 . 9 

Kindred— filial fear, law, , fame L C 270 

Kins?- King of graves and grave 



95 


7 


109 


10 


118 


7 




121 




312 




1423 


10 


11 


69 


11 


105 


5 


105 


9 


105 


10 


105 


13 


134 


6 


143 


12 




18fi 




207 




311 



253 



VA 



RL 



for kings 
Who like a king 
That kings might be espoused 
But king nor peer 
this proud issue of a king 
what thou art, a god, a king 
For kings, like gods 
■when once thou art a king 
Then kings' misdeeds 
' a sea, a sovereign king 
So shall these slaves be king 
Or kings be breakers 
to calm contending kings 
coming from a king 
grooms are sightless night, kings 

glorious day 

As silly-jeering idiots are witb kings" 1812 

to change my state with kings Son 29 14 
beauties whereof now he is king " 63 6 



995 
1043 
20 
21 
37 
001 
602 
606 
609 
652 
659 
852 
939 
1002 



King — In sleep a king, but waking 

no such matter Son 87 

and change decrees of kings " 115 

King Pandion he is dead P P 21 

Pity but he were a king " 21 

Save the eagle, feather'd king P T 

Kingdom — on the .... of the shore Son 64 

kingdoms of hearts shouldst owe " 70 

Kingly — most kingly drinks it up " 114 

Kinsman — But as he is my kinsman R L 

Thy kinsmen hang their heads " 

Kirtle — A cap of flowers and & . ... P P 20 

Kiss — I'll smother thee with kisses V A 

Ten kisses short as one " 

she murders with a kiss " 

And one sweet kiss " 

'Tis but a kiss I beg " 

The kiss shall be thine own " 

for one poor kiss " 

Give me one kiss " 

A thousand kisses " 

twenty hundred kisses " 

you shall have a kiss " 

to rob thee of a kiss " 

Lest she should steal a kiss " 

The kiss I gave you " 

by a kiss thought to persuade " 

the pillow of a lawful kiss R L 

Between each kiss P P 7 

Were kisses all the joys " 19 

KUs — Art thou ashamed to kiss V A 

to kiss his shadow " 

For men will kiss " 

He kisses her " 

he will kiss her still " 

they kiss each other " 

some kiss her face " 

ever strive to kiss you " 

He thought to kiss him " 

Wherein I will not kiss " 

to kiss the turrets bowed R L 

To kiss the tender inward Son 128 

me thy lips to kiss " 128 

kiss me, be kind " 143 

To kiss and clip me P P 11 

Kiss'd— Even so she kiss'd V A 

And kiss'd the fatal knife R L 

And often kiss'd L C 

Kissing — And kissing speaks V A 

■with continual kissing " 

With kissing him " 

Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion R L 

Son 33 
RL 



1013 



VA 
RL 



PP 

VA 



Kissing with golden face 
Knee — And with his knee 

their knees they bow 
Kneel — down she kneels 

But kneel with me 
Knell — rings out the doleful knell 

bell rings doleful knell 
Knew — as if she knew his mind 

her thirsty lips well knew 

no bearing yoke they knew 

my judgement knew no reason 

that the ruflSe knew 

And knew the patterns " 

Knew vows were ever brokers " 

Knife — for the self-same purpose 
seek a knife R L 

Will fix a sharp knife " 



RL 

Son 115 
L C 



14 
6 
23 
42 
11 
6 
14 
10 
237 
521 
11 
18 
22 
54 
84 
96 
117 
207 
209 
517 
522 
536 
723 
726 
771 
1114 
387 
S 
47 
121 
162 
216 
479 
480 
505 
872 
1082 
1110 
1188 
1372 
6 
14 
12 
14 
59 
1843 
51 
47 
606 
1118 
1370 
3 
359 
1846 
350 
1830 
1495 
28 
308 
543 
409 
3 
58 
170 
173 

1047 
1138 



KNIFE 



163 



LACKING 



Knife— I'll bequeath unto the knife R L 1184 

Mine honour be the knife's " 1201 

And with my knife scratch out " 1469 

A harmful knife " 1724 

The murderous knife • " 1735 

Brutus, Tvho pluck'd the knife " 1807 

and by this bloody knife " 1840 

And kiss'd the fatal knife " 1843 

confounding age's cruel knife Son 63 10 

conquest of a wretch's knife " 74 11 

The hardest knife ill used " 95 14 

his scythe and crooked knife " 100 14 

Knight— Knights by their oaths R L 1694 

ladies dead, and lovely knights Son 106 4 

One knight loves both P P 8 14 

or kill the gallant knight " 16 6 

the trusty knight was wounded " 16 11 

Knighthood— O shame to R L 197 

By knighthood, gentry " 569 

As bound in knighthood " 1697 

Knit — With heavy eye, knit brow " 709 

Knit poisonous clouds " 777 

my duty strongly knit Son 26 2 

Knock — Knocks at my heart VA 659 

Knot — neither sting, knot, nor con- 
fine L C 265 

Know- secrets shalt thou know VA 16 

nor know not what we mean " 126 

they know not whether " 304 

'I know not love,' quoth he, 'nor 

will not know it " 409 

know myself, seek not to know " 525 

For know, my heart " 779 

For now she knows " 883 

she knows not whither " 904 

Which knows no pity " 1000 

• why then I know " 1109 

but know, it is as good " 1181 

of this rash alarm to know R L 473 

I know what thorns " 492 

I know repentant tears " 502 

that knows no gentle right " 545 

that know not how " 810 

but he that gives them knows " 833 

thou shalt not know " 1058 

But thou shalt know " 1067 

nor law, nor limit knows " 1120 

That knows not parching heat " 1145 

Know, gentle wench " 1273 

to know your heaviness " 1283 

CoUatine may know " 1312 

prepares to let them know " 1607 

dear my love, you knosv Son 13 13 

Though yet, heaven knows "17 3 
They draw but what they see, 

know not the heart " 24 14 

And yet, love knows " 40 11 

the wretch did know " 50 7 

no motion shall I know " 51 8 

every blessed shape we know " 53 12 

O, know, sweet love " 76 9 
Thou by thy dial's shady stealth 

mayst know " 77 7 

and yet I know it not " 92 14 

I cannot know thy change " 93 6 

To know my shames "112 6 

mine eye well knows " 114 11 
Which is not mix'd with seconds, 

knows no art " 125 11 



Know — All this the world well 

knows, yet none knows well Son 129 13 
yet well I know . " 130 9 

And will, thy soul knows " 136 3 

They know what beauty is " 137 3 

Which my heart knows " 137 10 

though I know she lies " 138 2 

Although she knows " 138 6 

ah, my love well knows " 139 9 

from their physicians know " 140 8 

this shall I ne'er know " 144 13 

now I know thy mind " 149 13 

Love is too young to know " 151 . 1 

Yet who knows not " 151 2 

by age, desires to know L C 

though I know she lies P P 

Although I know my years " 

The truth I shall not know " 

The cock that treads them shall 

not know " 

These are certain signs to know " 

Knowing — As .... Tarquin's lust R L 
Knowing a better spirit Son 

thy own worth then not knowing " 
knowing thy will " 

Knowing thy heart torments me " 

Knowledge — my knowledge I derive " 
Within the knowledge of mine 

own desert " 

Thou art as fair in knowledge " 

If knowledge be the mark P P 

Known — if the fact be known R L 

than hate's known injury Son 

known to us poor swains P P 

Know'st— thou .... not what it is V A 
because thou know'st I love her Son 42 6 
thou know'st thy estimate " 87 2 

For well thou know'st to my dear 

doting heart " 131 3 

thou know'st I am forsworn " 152 1 

Labour — each passion labours so V A 969 

doth labour to expel " 976 

labour hence to heave thee R L 586 

With too much labour " 1099 

Yet save that labour " 1290 

what labour is 't to leave L C 239 

Labonr'd — the painter labour'd with 

his skill R L 1506 

Labouring — you see the pioner " 1380 

Which, labouring for invention Son 59 3 

And labouring in moe pleasures L C 139 

Labyrinth— Are like a labyrinth V A 684 

Lace — Andlaceitself withhissocietyiS'ore 67 4 

Lack— he did not lack VA 299 

and to lack her joy " 600 

but lack tongues to praise Son 106 14 

not born fair, no beauty lack " 127 11 

they foul that thy complexion lack " 132 14 

Lest the requiem lack his right P T 16 

Lack — I sigh the lack of many a 

thing Son 30 3 

Lack'd — being lack'd, to hope " 52 14 

Then lack'd I matter " 86 14 

Love lack'd a dwelling L C 82 

Lackey — Thou ceaseless lackey to 

eternity R L 97 

Lacking— lean, and lacking juice V A' 136 

Love-lacking vestals " 752 



1 


2 


1 


6 


2 


13 


19 


40 


21 


57 




1354 


80 


2 


87 


9 


89 


7 


132 


2 


14 


9 


49 


10 


82 


5 


5 


7 




239 


40 


12 


18 


4.5 




615 



LACKING 



164 



LAUGH'D 



Lacking— Which I by lacking Son 

Lad— Did court the lad P P 

Laden — one with treasure laden V A 
Lady — Ko, lady, no ; my heart " 

their dear governess and lady lies R L 
a sad look to her lady's sorrow " 

But, lady, if your maid may be " 
should right poor ladies' harms " 
In praise of ladies dead Son 

Ah, that I had my lady P P 

learned man hath got the lady gay " 
All my lady's love is lost " 

By ringing in thy lady's ear " 

Unless thy lady prove unjust " 

Laid — when sadly she had laid R L 
but laid no words to gage " 

laid great bases for eternity Son 

On purpose laid to make the taker 

mad " 

Cupid laid by his brand " 

Laid by his side " 

And down I laid L C 

Lain— Or lain in ambush R L 

Lagging^As lagging fowls before 

the northern blast " 

Lamb — never fright the silly lamb V A 
The silly lambs : pure thoughts R L 
the poor lamb cries " 

She like a wearied lamb " 

where he the lamb may get " 

How many lambs might the stern 

wolf betray Son 

If like a lamb he could his looks 
translate " 

Lame — The poor, lame, blind, halt, 
creep, cry out for thee R L 

So I, made lame by fortune's dear- 
est spite Son 
So then I am not lame " 
Youth is nimble, age is lame P P 
Lameness — Speak of my lameness Son 
Lament — she finds forlorn, she doth 
lament R L 
And m}' laments would be 
Lamentable — A thousand lament- 
able objects 
Lamentation — relenting dew of la- 
mentations 
Lamenting — lamenting Philomel 
had ended 
with my lamenting tongue 
Lamp — Were never four such lamps F 
the lamp that burns 
each lamp and shining star 
Where, lo, two lamps, burnt out, in 
darkness lies 
Lance — hath he hung his lance 
Land — ere rich at home he lands R L 
the heart of all her laud " 
can jump both sea and land Son 
Of lands and mansions L C 
Landlord — Than the true gouty 

landlord " 

Language — with lustful language V A 
Languish'd — To me that languish'd 

for her sake Son 

Languishetli — Even so she .... V A 
Languisliment — weeps at thy .... R L 
heartstrings to true languishment " 



31 


2 


4 


3 




1022 




7S5 




4-13 




1221 




12S2 




1694 


106 


4 


11 


13 


16 


15 


IS 


10 


19 


28 


19 


33 




1212 




1351 


125 


3 


129 


8 


153 


1 


154 


2 



4 
233 

1335 

109S 

167 

677 

737 



902 

3 
9 
6 
3 

1500 
1616 



1829 

1079 
1465 
489 
755 
861 

1128 
103 

336 

439 

7 

138 

140 
47 

3 

603 

1130 

1141 



Lank — lank and lean discolour'd 

cheek R L 70S 

Lap — Or from their proud lap Son 98 8 

Lapp'd — All thy friends are lapp'd 

in lead PP 21 24 

Large— To leap large lengths of land Son 44 10 
of this large privilege " 95 13 

whose will is large and spacious " 135 5 
to make thy large ' Will ' more " 135 12 

Why so large cost, having so short " 146 5 

Largeness — What largeness thinks 

in Paradise was sawn L C 91 

Largess — The bounteous largess 

given thee to give Son 4 6 

Lark — Lo, here the gentle lark V A 853 

Like to the lark at break of day Son 29 11 
were tuned Uke the lark P P 15 6 

Lascivious — . . . . grace, in whom Son 40 13 
Making /ascivious comments " 95 6 

Lass — Farewell, sweet lass P P 18 49 

Last — had ta'en his last leave V A 2 

And yields at last " 565 

picks them all at last " 576 

At last she thus begins RL 1.303 

At last she calls to mind " 1366 

At last she sees " 1501 

At last she smilingly " 1567 

At last he takes her " 1597 

At last it rains " 1790 

before these last so bad Son 67 14 
do not leave me last " 90 9 
and cry, ' It is thy last L C 16S 

Last — wish the feast might ever last F^ 447 

And as they last " 507 

Thy violent vanities can never last iJ £ 894 

cease thou thy course and last no 

longer " 1765 

She bade love last P P 7 16 

La.stiug — monuments of ... . moans R L 798 

else lasting shame " 1629 

Life's lasting date " 1729 

character'd with lasting memory Son 122 2 

Latch— Which with a yielding R L 339 

pluck'd up the latch " 358 

or shape, which it doth latch Son 113 6 

Late— brake off his late intent V A 469 

shrieks, — 'tis very late " 531 

gazer late did wonder " 748 

that was but late forlorn " 1026 

wherein they late excell'd " 1131 

which late this mutiny restrains R L 426 

Comes all too late " 1686 

and too late hath spili'd " 1801 

Lucrece' soul that late complained " 1839 

where late the sweet birds sang Son 73 4 

Which late her noble suit L C 234 

too late she will repent PP 19 15 

Late-embarked — a friend VA 818 

Late-sack'd — AVho, like a late-sack'd 

island R L 1740 

Lattice — through .... of sear'd age L C 14 

Laud— against long-living laud R L 622 

plantest scandal and displacest 
laud " 887 

Laugh — That laughs and weeps VA 414 

Nor laugh with his companions RL 1066 

To make the weeper laugh, the 
laugher weep L C 124 

Laugh'd— love he laugh'd to scorn VA 4 



LAUGH'D 



165 



LEAVE 



Lau^h'd — ^Saturn laugh'd and leap'diSbri 98 4 

Laugher — To make the weeper 

laugh, the laugher weep L C 124 

Laund — through the dark laund 

runs apace V A 813 

Laniidering — Laundering the silken 

figures L C 17 

Law — By law of nature V A 171 

in thine own law forlorn " 251 

on what he looks, 'gainst law or 

duty JS L 497 

■where are no laws " 544 

By holy human law " 571 

at right, at law, at reason " 880 

is past the help of law " 1022 

nor law nor limit knows " 1120 

thou hast the strength of law Son 49 13 

filial fear, law, kindred fame L C 270 

Lawful— Cozening the pillow of a 

lawful kiss R L 3S7 

lawful policy remains enacted " 529 

the dowry of a lawful bed " 938 

a lawful plea commence Son 35 11 

lawful reasons on thy part " 49 12 

Be it lawful I love thee " 142 9 

La^ni — Like lawn being spread VA 590 

that on lawn we lay RL 258 

Then white as lawn " 259 

Lay — For, where they lay VA 176- 

in the dark she lay " 827 

by her side lay kill'd " 11G5 

that on the ground lay spill'd " 1167 

roses that on lawn we lay R L 258 

in darkness sweetly lay " 398 

night's 'scapes doth open lay " 747 

thine honour lay in me " 834 

the guiltless casket where it lay " 1057 

Lays open all the little worms " 1248 

and on that pillow lay " 1620 

possess the claim they lay " 1794 

lay on me this cross Son 42 12 

beauty's truth to lay " 101 7 
That thy unkindness lays upon my 

heart "139 2 

Lay — Yet nor the lays of birds " 98 5 

that doth thy lays esteem " 100 7 

to greet it with my lays " 102 6 

And wish her lays P P 15 6 

Let the bird of loudest lay P T 1 

Lazy — with a lazy spright V A 181 

Lead — time leads summer on Son 5 5 

Who lead thee in their riot " 41 11 
many gazers mightst thou lead away •' 96 11 

that leads men to this hell " 129 14 

Le,ad — turn'd to fire, my heart to 

lead VA 1072 

Heavy heart's lead, melt " 1073 

All thy friends are lapp'd in lead P P 21 24 

Leaden — With leaden appetite V A 34 

Now leaden slumber R L 124 

Leader — true leaders to their queen V A 503 

by their leader's jocund show R L 296 

Leadeth— leadeth on to danger V A 788 

my captain, and he leadeth R L 271 

Leading — Leading him prisoner V A 110 

the leading to his hand R L 436 

Leaf— before one leaf put forth VA 416 

do the tender leaves " 798 

herb, leaf, or weed " 1055 



Leaf— His leaves will wither R L 11G8 

and lusty leaves quite gone Son 5 7 

trees I see barren of leaves " 12 5 

their fair leaves spread " 25 5 

When yellow leaves, or none " 73 2 

The vacant leaves " 77 3 

That leaves look pale " 97 14 

Study his bias leaves P P 5 5 

Through the velvet leaves " 17 5 

all with leaves of myrtle " 20 12 

League — That now he vows a . . . . R L 287 

this blessed league to kill " 383 

This forced league doth force " 689 

a league is took Son 47 1 

Lean — whereon we lean VA 125 

lean, and lacking juice " 136 

ugly, meagre, lean " 931 

and lean discolour'd cheek R L 708 

Lean penury within that pen Son 84 5 

Lean'd — lean'd on another's head R L 1415 

Lean'd her breast up-till a thorn PP 21 10 

Leaning- leaning on their elbows V A 44 

Leap — Imperiously he leaps " 265 

curvets and leaps " 279 

Whereat she leaps " 1026 

once more leap her eyes " 1050 

And bids it leap from thence P L 700 

To leap large lengths Son 44 10 

those jacks that nimble leap " 128 5 

Beasts did leap and birds did sing P P 21 5 

Leap'd — lustful lord leap'd from his 

bed RL 169 

Saturn laugh'd and leap'd with him 6'o?i 98 4 

Learn — And learn of him V A 404 

0, learn to love " 407 

Where subjects' eyes do learn R L 616 

the school where Lust shall learn " 617 

0, learn to read what silent love Son 23 13 

But thence I learn " 118 13 

Learned — learn'd to sport and dance T'^ 105 

He learn'd to sin Pi 630 

what is writ in learned books " 811 

feathers to the learned's wings Son 78 7 

He learn'd but surety-like " 134 7 

Well learned is that tongue P P 5 8 
the learned man hath got the lady 

gay " 16 15 

Learning — this .... mayst thou taste Son 11 4 

As high as learning " 78 14 

Which by a gift of learning P P 16 14 

Lease — which you hold in lease Son 13 5 
summer's lease hath all too short 

a date " 18 4 
Can yet the lease of my true love 

control " 107 3 

leases of short-number'd hours " 124 10 

having so short a lease " 146 5 

Least— And not the least V A 745 

by death, at least, I give Pi 1053 

Or, at the least, this refuge " 1654 

at least kind-hearted prove • Son 10 12 
With what I most enjoy contented 

least " 29 8 
When in the least of them my life 

hath end " 92 6 

Or, at the least " 122 5 

stands least in thy control " 125 14 

Leathern — with a leathern rein V A 392 

Leave — Had ta'en his last leave " 2 



LEAVE 



166 



LEST 



Leave — leave exceeds commission V A 568 

thy sour leisure gave svreet leave Son 39 10 

and give Mm leave to go " 51 14 

Leave — leave me here alone VA 382 

And leave this idle theme " 422 

'Where did I leave " 715 

Leave me, and then the story " 716 

Leaves Love upon her back " 814 

Bid them leave quaking " 899 

wolf would leave his prey " 1097 

Tarquin leaves the Roman host B L 3 

in venturing ill we leave to be " 148 

for thine own sake leave me " 583 

And leaves it to be master'd " 863 

leave thy peeping " 1089 

And leave the faltering " 1768 

audit canst thou leave Son 4 12 

Will sourly leave her " 41 8 

To leave poor me " 49 13 

1 leave my love alone " 66 14 

which thou must leave ere long " 73 14 

If thou wilt leave me " 90 9 

leaves out difference " 105 8 

To leave for nothing " 109 12 

Who leaves unsway'd " 141 11 

what labour is't to leave i C 239 

To leave the battery " 277 

and he takes and leaves " 305 

To leave the master loveless J" P 16 6 

Leaving— Leaving his spoil perplex'd J? L 733 

Leaving thee living in posterity Son 6 12 

Leaving no posterity P T 59 

Lecher— The lechers in their deed B L 1637 

a lover, or a lecher whether ? P P 1 11 

Lecture — read lectures of such 

shame P L 618 

Led— desire thus madly led " 300 

Leese— Leese but their show Son 5 14 

Left— still is left alive VA 174 

and left Adonis there " 322 

the very smell were left me " 441 

Left their round turrets P L 441 

the load of lust he left behind " 734 

no perfection of my summer left " 837 

Was left unseen, save to the eye 

of mind " 1426 

and, as it left the place " 1735 

summer's distillation left Son 5 9 

no form of thee hast left behind "96 
Art left the prey of every vulgar 

thief " 48 8 
Since I left you mine eye is in my 

mind " 113 1 

Hath left me, and I desperate " 147 7 

and left her all alone P P 9 14 

Pe/V— seize love upon thy left V A 158 

Left'st— For why thou left'st me 

. nothing PP 10 8 

And yet thou left'st me more " 10 9 

leg— straiglit legs and passing strong F^ 297 

Stands on his hinder legs " 698 

Ms weary legs doth scratch " 705 

a foot, a face, a leg, a head R L 1427 

Legacy— What legacyshalllbequeath " 1192 

thy beauty's legacy Son 4 2 

Legion — Which many legions of 

true hearts " 154 6 

Leisure— pay them at thy leisure V A 518 

Debate where leisure serves B L 1019 



Leisure — thy sour leisure gave sweet 

leave Son 39 10 
I must attend time's leisure " 44 12 
bound to stay your leisure " 58 4 
have no leisure taken " 120 7 
Or any of my leisures L C 193 

Leisurely — but do it leisurely B L 1349 

Lend — desire doth lend her force VA 29 

Her arms do lend his neck " 539 

to lend the world his light " ..... 756 

That lends embracements " 790 

May lend thee light, as thou dost 

lend " 864 

tears did lend and borrow " 961 

star did lend his light B L 164 

burn out thy light, and lend it not " • 190 

that to had debtors lends " 964 

Lends light to all fair eyes " 1083 

no god to lend her those " 1461 

She lends them words " 1498 

that thou shalt lend me " 1685 

gives nothing, but doth lend Son 4 3 

she lends to those are free "44 

lends but weak relief " 34 11 

can every shadow lend " 53 4 

He lends thee virtue " 79 9 

What strained touches rhetoric 

can lend " 82 10 
lends not some small glory " 84 6 
to lend base subjects light " 100 4 
Lest sorrow lend me words " 140 3 
anon their gazes lend L C 25 

Lcndeth — sorrow to my sorrow . ... R L 1676 

Lending — Lending him wit " 964 

Lending soft audience to my sweet 
design LC 278 

Length — through the of times B L 718 

At length address'd " 1605 

To leap large lengths Son 44 10 

and length thyself to-morrow PP 15 18 
Her feeble force will yield at length " 19 21 

Lent — to his melting buttock lent V A 315 

If love have lent you " *..... 775 

wealth the heavens had him lent B L 17 

For it was lent thee " 626 

glance that sly Ulysses lent " 1399 

to Phrygian shepherds leut " 1502 

their passions likewise lent me L C 199 

Less— they have but less B L 137 

cannot make it less " 1285 

men of less truth than tongue Son 17 10 
less false in rolling " 20 5 

are loved of more and less " 96 3 

I love not less, though less the 

show appear " 102 2 
summer is loss pleasant " 102 9 
Made more or less " 123 12 
And so much less of shame L C 188 

Lesser — more rage and lesser pity B L 468 

The lesser thing should not the 

greater hide " 663 

lesser noise than shallow fords " 1329 

'tis the lesser sin Son 114 13 

Lesson — the lesson is but plain V A 407 

and find the lesson true &iw 118 13 

Lest— lest thy hard heart VA 375 

Lest Jealousy, that sour " 449 

Lest she should steal a kiss " 726 

Lest the deceiving harmony " 781 



LEST 



167 



LIE 



Lest— Where, lest between them 

both RL 74 

lest he should hold it " 1315 

Lest my bewailed guilt should do 

thee shame Son 36 10 

Lest the wise world should look " 71 13 

O, lest the world should task you " 72 1 

O, lest your true love may seem " 72 9 
Lest I, too much profane, should 

do it wrong " 89 11 

Lest sorrow lend me words " 140 3 
Lest eyes well seeing thy foul 

fault should find " 148 14 
Lest guilty of my faults thy sweet 

self prove " 151 4 

Lest she some subtle practice smell P P 19 9 

Lest that my mistress hear " 19 50 

Lest the requiem lack his right P T 16 

let — let not advantage slip V A 129 

' let go, and let me go " 379 

Let me excuse thy courser " 403 

with wringing; let us part " 421 

let their crimson liveries " 506 

Now let me say " 535 

you crush me ; let me go " 611 

O, let him keep " 637 

will not let a false sound " 780 

that would let him go R L 76 

. Let fair humanity abhor " 195 

Let him return " 641 

So let thy thoughts " 666 

Let their exhaled unwholesome 

breaths make sick " 779 

Andlet thy misty vapours march " 782 

Let not the jealous Day behold " 800 

'Let my good name, that senseless 

reputation " 820 

Let ghastly shadows his lewd eyes 

affright " 971 

Let there bechance him " 976 

And let mild women to him lose " 979 

' Let him have time " 981 

Let»him have time " 9S2 

Let him have time " 983 

Let him have time " 984 

Let him have time " 985 

' Let him have time " 988 

Let him have time " 990 

And ever let his unrecalling crime " 993 

let the thief run mad " 997 

Is to let forth my foul-defiled blood " 1029 

let beasts bear gentle minds " 1148 

Then let it not be called impiety " 1174 

O, let it not be hild " 1257 

Let sin, alone committed, light 

alone " 1480 

Let guiltless souls be free " 1482 

to let them know " 1607 

this refuge let me find " 1654 

let it then suffice " 1679 

yet let the traitor die " 1686 

let no mourner say " 1797 

Let my unsounded self, supposed 

a fool " 1819 

let not winter's ragged hand d eface Son 6 1 

Let those whom Nature hath not " 11 9 

not let that copy die " 11 14 
Who lets so fair a house fall to 

decay " 13 9 



23 



25 


1 


34 


3 


36 


1 


38 


11 


39 


5 


56 


9 


58 


5 


71 


12 


84 


9 


105 


1 


116 


1 


125 


9 


132 


10 


133 


10 


133 


11 



Let — let your son say so Son 13 14 

0, let me, true in love, but truly 

write " 21 9 

Let them say more " 21 13 

O, let my books be then the elo- 
quence 
Let those who are in favour with 

their stars 
To let base clouds o'ertake me 
Let me confess 
Let him bring forth 
let us divided live 
Let this sad interim like the ocean 

be 
O, let me suffer 
But let your love even with my 

life decay 
Let him but copy 
Let not m'y love be call'd idolatry 
Let me not to the marriage 
let me be obsequious 
let it then as well beseem 
let my poor heart bail 
let my heart be his guard 
Let no unkind, no fair beseechers 

kill " 135 13 

let me pass untold " 136 9 

Let me excuse thee " 139 9 

let that pine to aggravate thy store " 146 10 

that lets not bounty fall L C 41 

and had let go by " 59 

Let it not tell your judgement " 73 

Let reason rule things P P 19 3 

Let the bird of loudest lay P T 1 

Let the priest in surplice white " 13 

To this urn let those repair " 65 

Let — When Collatine unwisely did 

not let R L 10 

With a lingering stay his course 

doth let " 328 

These lets attend the time " 330 

swells the higher by this let " 646 

Letter— A letter to my lord • " 1293 

she would not blot the letter " 1322 

Her letter now is seal'd " 1331 

Found yet moe letters L C 47 

Level — within the level of your 

frown Son 117 11 
and they that level " 121 9 
which in his level came L C 309 

LevelI'd — Sometimes her levell'd eyes " 22 

were levell'd on my face " 282 

Lewd — of lewd unh'allow'd eyes R L 392 

shadows his lewd eyes affright " 971 

Liberty — wrongs that .... commits Son 41 1 
absence of your liberty " 58 6 
to tempt all, liberty procured L C 252 

Licking — licking of his wound V A 915 

Lid— She lifts the coflfer-lids " 1127 

Lie — Panting he lies " 62 

Look, how a bird lies " 67 

in her arms Adonis lies " 68 

there thy beauty lies " 119 

bank whereon I lie " 151 

And, lo, I lie between " 194 

pleasant fountains lie " 234 

there he came to lie " 215 

on the grass she lies " 473 

whereon thou dost lie " 646 



LIE 



168 



LIGHT 



Lie — on his back doth lie VA 663 

Lie quietly, and hear " 709 

lamps, burnt out, in darkness lies " 1128 

doth Tarquin lie revolving It L 127 

her beloved CoUatinus lies " 256 

where such treasure lies " 280 

from the rushes where it lies " 318 

Lies at the mercy " 364 

her rosy cheek lies under " 386 

like a virtuous monument, she lies " 391 

their dear governess and lady lies "" 443 

she trembling lies " 457 

under his insulting falchion lies " 509 

lamb lies panting there " 737 

Immodestly lies martyr'd " 802 

whose guilt within their bosoms lie " ....1342 

. under Pyrrhus' proud foot lies " 1448 

in bloody channel lies " 1487 

the father's image lies " 1753 

where abundance lies Son 1 7 

where all thy beauty lies "25 

your true image pictured lies " 24 6 

their pride lies buried " 25 7 

that hidden in thee lie " 31 8 

that thou in him dost lie " 46 5 

thy fair appearance lies " 46 8 

My grief lies onward " 50 14 

from Time's chest lie hid " 65 10 

on the ashes of his youth doth lie " 73 10 
When )'ou entombed in men's eyes 

shall lie " 81 8 

my life on thy revolt doth lie " 92 10 

for't lies in thee " 101 10 

which in thy breast doth lie " 109 4 

see where it lies " 137 3 

Therefore I lie with her " 138 13 

the bath for my help lies " 153 13 

what a hell of witchcraft lies L C 288 

Therefore I'll lie with love PP 1 13 

lie wither'd on the ground " 13 9 

Here enclosed in cinders lie P T 55 

Lk,, M.— Lust full of forged lies VA 804 

devise some virtuous lie Son 72 5 

by Ues we flatter'd be " 138 14 

give the lie to my true sight " 150 3 

against the truth so foul a lie " 152 14 

thou register of lies L C 52 

Lie, V. — would say this poet lies Son 17 7 
Those lines that I before have writ 

doUe " 115 1 
For thy records and what we see 

doth lie " 123 11 

though I know she lies " 138 2 

though I know she lies PP 1 2 

Life— ending with thy Ufe VA 12 

life were done " 197 

would surpass the life " 289 

it is a life in death " 413 

breatheth life in her " 474 

or life desire " 496 

and life was death's annoy " 497 

reaves his son of life " 766 

with life's strength doth fight £ L 124 

is but to nurse the life " 141 

As life for honour " 145 

to betray my life " 233 

Must sell her joy, her life " 385 

Showing life's triumph " 402 

death's dim look in Ufe's mortality " 403 



Life — But that life lived in death and 

death in life R L 406 

with thy life's decay " 516 

Thou their fair life " 661 

lost a dearer thing than life " 687 

The life of purity " 780 

Or kills his life " 875 

to end a hapless life " 1045 

A dying life to living infamy " 1055 

Till life to death acquit " 1071 

When life is shamed " 1155 

to deprive dishonour'd life " 1186 

My life's foul deed, my life's fair 

end shall free it ^ " 1207 

Besides, the life and feeling " 1317 

Of spirit, life, and bold audacity " 1346 

art gave lifeless life " 1374 

Show'd life imprison'd " 1456 

one man's lust these many lives 

confounds " 1489 

Life's lasting date " 1729 

That life was mine " 1752 

I did give that life " 1800 

who holding Lucrece' life " 1805 

consumest thyself in single life Son 9 2 

the lines of life that life repair " 16 9 

Which hides your life " 17 4 

this gives life to thee " 18 14 

Though in our lives " 36 6 
My life, being made of four, with 

two alone " 45 7 

Until life's composition " 45 9 

though my lover's life " 63 12 

To live a second life " 68 7 

Even with my life decay " 71 12 

My life hath in this line " 74 3 

lost the dregs of life " 74 9 
you are to my thoughts as food to 

life " 75 1 

immortal life shall have " 81 5 

others would give life " 83 12 

lives more life in one " 83 13 

For term of life " 92 2 

And life no longer " 92 3 

my life hath end " 92 6 

my life on thy revolt doth lie " 92 10 

than Time wastes life " 100 13 

better for my life provide " 111 3 

And saved my life " 145 14 

vow'd chaste life to keep " 154 3 

gave life and grace L C 114 

Lifeless — Fie, lifeless picture V A 211 

art gave lifeless life B L 1374 

Life-poisoniug— Life-poisoning pes- 
tilence VA 740 

Lifts— She lifts the coffer-lids " 1127 

Lifts up his burning head Son 7 2 

Light, «. — the crystal tears gave .... F^ 491 

that shadow heaven's light " 533 

lend the world his light " 756 

their light blown out " 826 

patron of all light " 860 

May lend thee light " 864 

oflSce and their light " 1039 

threw unwilling light " 1051 

were open'd to the light R L 105 

No comfortable star did lend his 

light " 164 

Fair torch, burn out thy light " 190 



LIGHT 



169 



LIKE 



Light, n.— To darken her whose 




Like— Shone like the moon VA .. 


.. 492 


light 


RL 


191 


Like a wild bird " .. 


.. SCO 


Mine eyes forego their light 




228 


like the froward infant " .. 


... 562 


hy the light he spies 




316 


like a pale-faced coward " .. 


.. 569 


blinded with a greater light 




375 


Like lawn being spread " .. 


.. 590 


had sheathed their light 




_... 397 


Like to a mortal butcher " .. 


... 618 


eyes fly from their lights 




461 


eyes, like glow-worms " .. 


... 621 


Small lights are soon blown out 




647 


But, like an earthquake " .. 


... 648 


sets his foot upon the light 




673 


An image like thyself " .. 


... 664 


For light and lust 




674 


like a labyrinth " . 


... 684 


looks for the morning light 




745 


like the wanton mermaid's " .. 


.. 777 


to meet the eastern light 




773 


Love comforteth like sunshine " .. 


.. 799 


in their smoky ranks his smother'd 




Lust like a glutton dies " .. 


.. 803 


light 


" 


783 


In such-like circumstance, with 




The light will show 


" 


807 


such-like sport " .. 


.. 844 


and bring truth to light 


" 


940 


Like shrill-tongued tapsters " .. 


.. 849 


Lends light to all fair eyes tha 






Like a milch doe " .. 


.. 875 


light will borrow 


" 


1083 


like one that spies " .. 


.. 878 


with thy piercing light 


" 


1091 


Like soldiers, when their captain " .. 


.. 893 


ocean quench their light 


" 


1231 


Like milk and blood " .. 


... 902 


gleam'd forth their ashy lights 


" 


1.378 


Like the proceedings " .. 


.. 910 


creature, with a flaming light 


" 


1627 


like sluices, stopp'd " .. 


... 956 


Feed'st thy light's flame 


Son 


1 6 


But like a stormy day " .. 


... 965 


when the gracious light 


" 


7 1 


Like many clouds " .. 


... 972 


dost give invention light 


" 


38 8 


like pearls in glass " .. 


... 980 


with thy much clearer light 


" 


43 7 


Like stars ashamed " .. 


.. 1032 


once in the main of light 


" 


60 5 


Who, like a king " .. 


.. 1043 


to lend base subjects light 


" 


100 4 


lurk'd like two thieves " .. 


... 1086 


lAglit, D.— Torches are made to light 


VA 


.... 163 


been tooth'd like him " .. 


... 1117 


Let sin, alone committed, ligh 






melted like a vapour " .. 


.. 1166 


alone 


RL 


.... 1480 


shows like a virtuous deed R L .. 


... 252 


lAght, adj. — but light and will aspire 


VA 


.... 150 


Like little frosts " .. 


.. 331 


Is love so light, sweet boy 


" 


.... 155 


Where, like a virtuous monument " .. 


.. 391 


to every light impression 


" 


.... 566 


Show'd like an April daisy " .. 


.. 395 


treads on it so light 


" 


.... 1028 


Her eyes, like marigolds " .. 


.. 397 


should yet be light 


" 


.... 1134 


Her hair, like golden threads " .. 


.. 400 


in her light chariot 


" 


.... 1192 


Her breasts, like ivory globes " .. 


.. 407 


That through their light joy 






Who, like a foul usurper " .. 


.. 412 


seemed to appear 


RL 


.... 1434 


like straggling slaves " .. 


.. 428 


And every light occasion 


LC 


86 


Like to a new-kill'd bird " .. 


.. 457 


Light, a(ii'.— When thou shall be dis- 






First, like a trumpet " .. 


.. 470 


posed to set me light 


Son 


88 1 


Which, like a falcon " .. 


.. 506 


Lighted— And being lighted 


RL 


.... 316 


Like a white hind " .. 


.. 543 


Lightetli — torch forthwith he ... . 


" 


.... 178 


look'st not like deceit " .. 


.. 585 


Lightless — bears the lightless fire 


" 


4 


My sighs, like whirlwinds " .. 


.. 586 


steal efi'ects from lightless hell 


" 


.... 1555 


like a troubled ocean " .. 


.. 589 


Lightning — as .... from the sky 


VA 


.... 348 


For kings, like gods " .. 


.. 602 


Thine eye Jove's lightning seems 


PP 


5 11 


the like oflences prove " .. 


.. 613 


Like — like a bold-faced suitor 


VA 


6 


Till, like a jade " .. 


.. 707 


Like a dive-dapper 




.... 86 


Like to a bankrupt " .. 


.. 711 


Or, like a fairy, trip 




.... 146 


He like a thievish dog " .. 


.. 736 


Or, like a nymph 




.... 147 


She like a wearied lamb " .. 


.. 737 


flowers like sturdy trees 




.... 152 


like water that doth eat " .. 


.. 7.55 


So he were like him 




.... 180 


But like still-pining Tantalus " .. 


.. 858 


Like misty vapours 




.... 184 


But if the like the snow-white 




Thing like a man 




.... 214 


swan desire " .. 


.. 1011 


like a band 




.... 225 


mine eyes, like sluices " .. 


.. 1076 


like heaven's thunder 




.... 268 


Like an unpractised swimmer " .. 


.. 1098 


glisters like fire 




.... 275 


When with like semblance " .. 


.. 1113 


wave like feather'd wings 




.... 306 


like a gentle flood " .. 


.. 1118 


Then, like a melancholy 




.... 313 


moisten'd like a melting eye " .. 


.. 1227 


that, like a falling plume 




.... 314 


weep like the dewy night " .. 


.. 1232 


like a lowly lover 




.... 350 


Like ivory conduits " .. 


.. 1234 


Show'd like two silver doves 




.... 366 


like a goodly champaign plain " .. 


.. 1247 


How like a jade he stood 




.... 391 


Much like a press of people " .. 


.. 1301 


aim at like delight 




.... 400 


Like dying coals burnt out " .. 


.. 1379 


Like a red morn 




.... 453 


Like bright things stain'd " .. 


.. 1435 


Like the deadly bullet 




.... 461 


like a heavj^-hanging bell " .. 


.. 1493 


Like the fair sun 




.... 483 


like a constant and confirmed devil " .. 


.. 1513 



LIKE 



170 



LIP 



Like— Whose words, like wildfire S L 1523 

like rainbows in the sky " 1587 

stood, like old acquaintance " 1595 

Who, like a late-sack'd city " 1740 

Like feeble age Son 7 10 
like a makeless wife "94 

Be scorn'd like old men " 17 10 

Which, like a jewel " 27 11 

Wishing me like to one " 29 5 
Featured like him, like him with 

friends possess'd " 29 6 

Like to the lark " 29 11 

Like stones of worth " 52 7 

interim like the ocean be " 56 9 

But like a sad slave " 57 11 

Like as the waves make towards " 60 1 

shadows like to thee " 61 4 

And, like unletter'd clerk " 85 6 

like enough thou know'st " 87 2 

Like a deceived husband " 93 2 

How like Eve's apple " 93 13 

Which, like a canker " 95 2 

If like a lamb " 96 10 

How like a winter " 97 1 

Like widow'd wombs " 97 8 

Therefore, like her, I sometime " 102 13 

like a dial-hand " 104 9 

but yet, like prayers divine " 108 5 

Like him that travels " 109 6 

like the dyer's hand " 111 7 

"Wliilst, like a willing patient " 111 9 

Like as to make our appetites " 118 1 

are nothing like the sun " 130 1 

And suit thy pity like in every part " 132 12 

He learn'd but surety-like to write " 134 7 

Which like two spirits " 144 2 

who, like a fiend " 145 11 

Like usury, applying wet to wet X C 40 

Like unshorn velvet " 94 

Like fools that in the imagination 

set " 136 

Which, like a cherubin " 319 

That like two spirits PP 2 2 
to me like oaks, to thee like osiers "54 

Like a green plum " 10 5 

should use like loving charms " 11 8 
Youth like summer morn, age like 

winter weather " 12 3 
Youth like summer brave, age like 

winter bare " 12 4 

for shadows like myself " 14 11 

were jtuned like the lark " 15 6 

Like a thousand vanquish'd men " 18 36 

Thy like ne'er was " 18 50 

Even so, poor bird, like thee " 21 27 

Words are easy, like the wind " 21 33 

Zdlx — like you worse and worse VA 774 

Distress likes dumps R L 1127 

Let them say more that like of 

hearsay well Son 21 13 
But you like none, none you, for 
constant heart " 53 14 

Liked— That liked of her master P P 16 2 

Likely— In likely thoughts VA 990 

Likeness — In that thy likeness " 174 

In Tarquin's likeness P L 596 

the likeness of a man Son 141 11 

Liker — Much liker than your paint- 
ed counterfeit " 16 8 



Likewise — May .... be sepulchred P£ 805 

their passions likewise lent me L C 199 

Liking— to swallow Venus' liking VA 248 

bids them do their liking P L 434 

yoke thy liking to my will " 1633 

Lily — locks her lily fingers VA 228 

A lily prison'd " 362 

whose wonted lily white " 1053 

of lilies and of roses P L 71 

Her lily hand her rosy cheek lies 

under " 886 

anger makes the lily pale " 478 

Lilies that fester, smell far worse Son 94 14 

wonder at the lily's white " 98 9 

The lily I condemned " 99 6 

A lily pale, with damask dye P P 7 5 

Limb — each several limb is doubled VA 1067 

limbs with travel tired Son 27 2 

Lo, thus by day, my limbs " 27 13 

Limbeck — Distill'd from limbecks ',' 119 2 

Limed — Birds never limed no secret 

bushes fear P i 88 

Limit— Within this limit VA 235 

nor law, nor limit knows P L 1120 

From limits far remote Son 44 4 

a limit past my praise " 82 6 

Limning — In limning out VA 290 

Limping— by limping sway disabled Son 66 8 

Line — to attend each line P L 818 

So should the lines of life Son 15 9 
When in eternal lines to time thou 

grow'st " 18 12 

Nor draw no lines there " 19 10 

These poor rude lines " 32 4 

AVith lines and wrinkles " 63 4 

in these black lines be seen " 63 13 

Nay, if you read this line " 71 5 

My life hath in this line " 74 3 

your countenance fill'd up his line " 86 13 

Dulling my lines " 103 8 

Those lines that I before have writ " 115 1 

in top of rage the lines she rents L C 55 

Linen — the nightly linen that she 

wears P L 680 

Linger — To linger out a purposed 

overthrow Soyi 90 8 

Lingering — Who, with a . . . . stay P L 328 

Lion— on the lion he will venture VA 628 

rough bear, or lion proud " 884 

the lion walk'd along " 1093 

As the grim lion fawneth P L 421 

the unicorn and lion wild " 956 

Time, blunt thou the lion's paws Son 19 1 

Lip — lips with loathed satiety VA 19 

but soon she stops his lips " 46 

thy lips shall never open " 48 

her lips were ready " 89 

turns his lips another way " 90 

Touch but my li^ps with those fair 

lips of thine " 115 

why not lips on lips " 120 

upon thy tempting lip " 127 

thy lips the worse for one poor kiss " 207 

Graze on my lips " 233 

He chafes her lips " 477 

for thy piteous lips " 504 

Pure lips, sweet seals in my soft 

lips imprinted " 511 

on my wax-red lips " 516 



LIP 



171 



LIVED 



Lip — thirsty lips well knew VA 

their lips together glued " 

Her lips are couquerors, his lips 

obey 
his lilts' rich treasure 
nectar from his lips 
sweet lips and crystal eyne 
so do thy lips 
looks upon his lips 
Her coral lips E 

in her lips' sweet fold 
through her lips, so vanisheth 
and from his lips did fly 
From lips new-waxen pale 
through his lips do throng 
Of hand, of foot, of lip Son 106 

though rosy lips and cheeks " 116 

Whilst my poor lips " 128 

more blest than living lips " 128 

me thy lips to kiss " 128 

more red than her lips' red " 130 

not from those lips of thine " 142 

Those lips that love's own hand 

did make " 145 

Upon his lips their silken parcels 

hurls L C 

Her lips to mine P P 7 

he seized on my lips " 11 

And with her lips on his " 11 

Liquid — A liquid prisoner pent in 



543 
546 

549 

552 

572 

633 

724 

1123 

420 

679 

1041 

1406 

1663 

1783 

6 

9 

7 

12 
14 
2 
5 



Son 
VA 



PL . 
Soyi 
LC . 
VA . 
PL , 



VA 



walls of glass 

List — where I list to sport me 
in the very lists of love 
hide them when they list 
Be where you list 
to list the sad-tuned tale 

Listening — with listening ear 
with open listening ear 
All jointly listening 
listening Priam wets his eyes 

Listeth — not all she listeth 

Little — themselves in little time " 
thence doth little harm " 
hear a little more " 
And then my little heart " 
For every little grief " 
Little suspecteth the false wor- 
shipper P L 
through little vents and crannies " 
Like little frosts " 
A little harm done " 
huge stones with little water-drops " 
But little stars may hide " 
The little birds that tune " 
the little worms that creep " 
each little mote will peep " 
a little while doth stay " 
the Greeks with little lust " 
Then little strength rings out " 
And little stars shot " 
but a little moment 
The little Love-god " 
on his visage was in little drawn L C 

Live — That thine may live V A 

which lives by subtlety " 

There lives a son " 

Adonis lives, and Death " 

lives and must not die " 

That it will live engraven R L 



Son 15 
" 154 



87 
7 
9 

10 

10 

154 

595 

1008 

9 

4 

698 

283 

1410 

1548 

564 

132 

195 

709 

,783 

1179 

86 

310 

331 

528 

959 

1008 

1107 

1248 

1251 

1364 

1384 

1495 

1525 

2 

1 

90 

172 

675 

863 

992 

1017 

203 



Live— that doth live by slaughter PL 955 

Let him have time to live " 984 

one that by alms doth live " 986 

my honour lives in thee " 1032 

But if I live thou livest in my de- 
fame " 1033 

I live, and seek in vain " 1044 

for which I sought to live " 1051 

To live or die, which of the twain " 1154 

The one will live " 1187 

fame that lives disbursed be " 1203 

To those that live " 1204 

I should not live to speak " 1642 

Where shall I live " 1754 

live, sweet Lucrece, live again " 1770 

And live to be revenged " 1778 

But if thou live Son 3 13 

yet canst not live "48 

lives th' executor to be " 4 14 

their substance still lives sweet " 5 14 

may live in thine or thee " 10 14 

Herein lives wisdom " 11 5 

you yourself here live " 13 2 

Can make you live " 16 12 

And you must live " 16 14 

You should live twice " 17 14 

So long lives this '• 18 14 
My love shall in my verse ever 

live young " 19 14 

in thy breast doth live " 22 7 

where buried love doth live " 31 9 

canker lives in sweetest bud " 35 4 

of all thy glory live " 37 12 

let us divided live " 39 5 

which doth in it live " 54 4 

They live unwoo'd " 54 10 

You live in this " 55 14 

And they shall live " 63 14 

with infection should he live " 67 1 

Why should he live " 67 9 

lives upon his gains " 67 12 

To live a second life " 68 7 

And live no more " 72 12 

what in thee doth live " 79 12 

Or I shall live " 81 1 

You still shall live " 81 13 

There lives more life " 83 13 

So shall I live " 93 1 

For there can live " 93 5 

it only live and die " 94 10 

I'll live in this poor rhyme " 107 11 

if not lives in disgrace "127 8 

but live in doubt " 144 13 

live thou upon thy servant's loss " 146 9 
I shall not know, but live in doubt jP P 2 13 

Where all those pleasures live "56 

age and youth cannot live together " 12 1 

Must live alone " 18 53 

Live with me and be my love " 20 1 

Then live with me and be my love " 20 16 

To live with thee and be thy love " 20 20 

Lived— there Love lived VA 246 

But now I lived " 497 

Who when he lived " 935 

lived and died with him " 1080 

But when Adonis lived " 1085 

life lived in death P L 406 

that lived by foul devouring " 700 

burn the long-lived phoenix Son 19 4 



LIVED 



172 



LONGER 



Lired— When beauty lived and died Son 68 2 
What merit lived in me " 72 2 

have often lived alone " 105 13 

who have lived for crime " 124 14 

Livelihood — The precedent of pith 

and livelihood V A 26 

Lively — death was lively joy " 498 

Her lively colour kill'd ' R L 1593 

to blush through lively veins Son 67 10 

A dateless lively heat " 153 6 

For her griefs so lively shone P P 21 17 

Liver — which in his liver glows R L 47 

Livery — never let their crimson liv- 
eries wear V A 506 

livery that he wore " 1107 

A badge of fame to slander's livery P/i 1054 

her face wore sorrow's livery " 1222 

Thy youth's proud livery Son 2 3 
Kept hearts in liveries L C 195 

Livery — Did livery falseness " 105 

Livest — thou livest in my defame R L 1033 

Living — As if the dead the living 

should exceed VA 292 

thy death my living sorrow " 671 

against long-living laud R L 622 

living death and i^ain perpetual " 726 

A dying life to living infamy " 1055 

no dame hereafter living " 1714 

Leaving thee living Son 6 12 

would bear your living flowers " 16 7 
looking on thee in the living day " 43 10 
The living record of your memory " 55 8 
steal dead seeing of his living hue " 67 6 
inhabit on a living brow " 68 4 

more blest than living lips " 128 12 

To spend her living L G 238 

Living in thrall PP 18 22 

Lo— And, lo, I lie between V A 194 

But, lo, from forth a copse " 259 

Lo, thus my strength is tried _ " 280 

When, lo, the unback'd ' " 320 

Lo, here the gentle lark " 853 

Where, lo, two lamps " 1128 

lo, here I prophesy " 1135 

Lo, in this hollow cradle " 1185 

lo, there falls into thy boundless 

flood R L 653 

when, lo, the blushing morrow " 1082 

Lo, here weeps Hecuba " 1485 

Lo, here the hopeless merchant " 1660 

Lo, in the orient Son 7 1 

Lo, thus by day my limbs " 27 13 

Lo, as a careful housewife " 143 1 

And, lo, behold these talents L C 204 

Lo, all these trophies " 218 

Lo, this device was sent me " 232 

For, lo, his passion " 295 

Load— I had my load before VA 430 

She bears the load of lust R L 734 

This load of wrath " 1474 

Loan— those that pay the willing 

loan Son 6 6 

Loathed — with loathed satiety VA 19 

Thou loathed in their shame RL 662 

his vanish'd loathed delight " 742 

turn to loathed sours " 867 

to live a loathed slave " 984 

Loathsome — keep his. ... cabin still F^ 637 

of his loathsome enterprise R L 184 



Loathsome — Some loathsome oath 

the herald will contrive R L 206 

write my loathsome trespass " 812 

The loathsome act of lust " 1636 

And loathsome canker lives Son 35 4 

Lock — under twenty locks V A 575 

Play with his locks " 1090 

The locks between her chamber RL 302 

His browuy locks did hang L C 85 

Lock — locks her lily fingers V A 228 

bid Suspicion double-lock the door " 448 

Locked — in my hand being lock'd R L 260 

breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes * 446 

lock'd up in any chest Son 48 9 

his sweet up-locked treasure " 52 2 

Lode-star — . ... to his lustful eye R L 179 

Lodged — lodged not a mind so ill " 1530 

be fairer lodged than gentle love Son 10 10 
She was new lodged L C 84 

Lofty — bark peel'd from the lofty 

pine R L 1167 

When lofty trees I see Son 12 5 

sometime lofty towers I see " 64 3 

Long — one long as twenty V A 22 

Which long have rain'd " 83 

with long dishevell'd hair " 147 

fetlocks shag and long " 295 

Long may they kiss " 505 

lovers' hours are long " 842 

they long have gazed " 927 

Long after fearing to creep forth " 1036 

Of things long since, or " 1078 

after supper long he questioned P^ L 122 

To hold their cursed-blessed for- 
tune long " 865 

But long she thinks " 1359 

quench Troy that burns so long " 1468 

too long with her remaining " 1572 

Short time seems long " 1573 

would be drawn out too long " 1616 

from heart-easing words so long " 1782 

So long as men can breathe Son 18 13 

So long lives this " 18 14 

So long as youth and thou " 22 2 

weep afresh love's long-since-can- 

cell'd woe " 30 7 

to outlive long date " 38 12 

in the long year set " 52 6 

In days long since " 67 14 

thou must leave ere long " 73 14 

that thou forget'st so long " 100 1 

make him seem long hence " 101 14 

so long as brain and heart " 122 5 

Ere long espied a fickle maid L C 5 

And long upon these terms " 176 

methinks thou stay'st too long P P 12 12 
Long was the combat doubtful " 16 5 
my tongue to be so long " 19 52 

Long — my heart longs not to groan V A 785 

and then she longs for morrow R L 1571 

long to hear her words " 1610 

Longer — no longer to restrain him V A 579 

cease then thy course and last no 

longer R L 1765 

No longer yours thaa you yourself 

live here Son 13 2 

draw my sorrows longer " 28 13 

but then no longer glad " 45 13 

No longer mourn for me " 71 1 



LONGER 



173 



LOSE 



Longer^-And life no longer than thy 

love Son 92 3 

longer nurseth the disease " 147 2 

Long-experienced — set thy long- 
experienced wit to school R L 1820 

Long-hid — his ivits advisedly " 181(j 

Longing — Longing to hear the hate- 
ful foe " 1698 

as a fever longing still Son 147 1 

A longing tarriance for Adonis PP 6 4 

Long-lived — burn the .... phcenix Son 19 4 

Long-living — reproach against long- 
living laud R L 622 

Look — Look, how a bird lies VA R7 

Look how he can, she cannot choose " 79 

Look in mine eyeballs " 119 

Look, when a painter " 289 

Look, what a horse should have " 299 

He looks upon his love " 307 

Looks on the dull earth " 840 

Look, the world's comforter " 529 

and look well to her. heart " 580 

Look, how a bright star " 815 

Look, how the world's poor people " 925 

looks so steadfastly " 1063 

looks upon his lips " 1123 

That eye which looks on her R L 290 

Look, as the fair and fiery-pointed 

sun " 372 

She dares not look " 458 

And dotes on what he looks " 497 

eyes do learn, do read, do look " 616 

Look, as the full-fed hound " 694 

looks for the morning light " 745 

look to her lady's sorrow " 1221 

those far-off eyes look sad " 1386 

Look, look, how listening Priam " 1548 

She looks for night " 1571 

Look in thy glass Son 3 1 

and look another way " 7 12 
Look, what an unthrift "99 

Look, whom she best endow'd " 11 11 

Then look I death " 22 4 

and look for recompense " 23 11 

And look upon myself " 29 4 

Look, what is best " 37 13 

in dreams they look on thee " 43 3 

The rose looks fair " 54 3 

They look into the beauty " 69 9 

you look upon this verse " 71 9 

should look into your moan " 71 13 

Look, what thy memory " 77 9 

so oft as thou wilt look " 77 13 

strangle and look strange " 89 8 

That leaves look pale " 97 14 

Look in your glass " 103 6 
Your own glass shows you when 

you look in it " 103 14 

My love looks fresh " 107 10 

That looks on tempests " 116 6 

says beauty should look so " 127 14 

Look here, what tributes L C 197 

she hotter that did look P P 6 7 

Look—0, what a war of looks VA 355 

For one sweet look " 371 

And at his look " 463 

looks kill love, and love by looks 

reviveth " 464 

■with looks again " ..... 1042 



Look — no meaning from their parl- 

ing looks R L 100 

And death's dim look " 403 

my loathsome trespass in my looks " 812 

with bold stern looks " 1252 

Pawn'd honest looks " 1351 

and she their looks doth borrow " 1498 

piteous looks to Phrygian shep- 
herds lent " 1502 

calm looks, eyes wailing still " 1508 

can lurk in such a look " 1535 

Serving with looks Son J 4 

Yet mortal looks "77 

is famish'd for a look " 47 3 

with a backward look "59 5 

clean starved for a look " 75 10 

Thy looks with me " 93 4 

In many's looks the false heart's 

history " 93 7 

Thy looks should nothing " 93 12 . 

could his looks translate " 96 10 

by over-partial looks " 137 5 

pretty looks have been mine ene- 
mies " 189 10 
Kill me outright with looks " 139 14 
with many a lovely look PP 4 3 
Such looks as none could look "44 
Her cloudy looks will calm " 19 14 

Look'd— who, being look'd on VA 87 

look'd red and raw R L 1592 

And some look'd black " 1743 

look'd but with divining eyes Son 106 11 
that I have look'd on truth " 110 5 

The sun look'd on the world P P 6 11 

Look'st— Thou not like deceit R L 585 

Looketh — still looketh for a grave VA 1105 

Looking— Then looking scornfully R L 187 

Looking on darkness Son 27 8 

By looking on thee " 43 10 

Looking with pretty ruth " 132 4 

Till looking on an Englishman P P 16 3 

Loop-hole — through thrust R L 1383 

Loose — nor loose nor tied in formal 

plat L C 29 

braided in loose negligence " 35 

Lord — this false lord arrived R L 50 

And now this lustful lord " 169 

The Roman lord marcheth " 301 

Save of their lord " 409 

this faultful lord of Pome " 715 

Dear lord of that dear jewel " 1191 

those proud lords to blame " 1259 

A letter to my lord " 1293 

she thus begins: 'Thou worthy lord " 1303 

At Ardea to my lord " 1332 

Brings home his lord " 1584 

CoUatine and his consorted lords " 1609 

Dear lord, thy sorrow " 1676 

ere I name him, you fair lords " 1688 

Each present lord began " 1696 

He, he, fair lords, 'tis he " 1721 

Thou wronged lord of Eome " 1818 

Lord of my love <Si9» 26 1 

They are the lords " 94 7 

after their lord's decease " 97 8 

Lord, how mine eyes P P 15 1 

Lording — It was a lording's daughter " IS 1 

Lordly— and all his lordly crew R L 1731 

Lose — Having no fair to lose V A 1083 



LOSE 



174 



LOVE 



Lose — what he would lose again R L 688 

to him lose their mildness " 979 

They that lose half " 1158 

Nor lose possession of that fair Son 18 10 

lose name of single one " 39 6 

If I lose thee " 42 9 

and I lose both twain " 42 11 

which it fears to lose " 64 14 

knife ill used doth lose his edge " 97 14 

lose their dear delight " 102 12 

Lose all and more " 125 6 

So him I lose " 134 12 

Loseth— Loseth his pride VA 420 

Losing — Losing her woes in shows B L 1580 

And losing her, my friend Son 42 10 

That thou in losing me " 88 8 

Still losing when I saw myself "119 4 
Loss — for loss of Nestor's golden 

words R L 1420 

the hopeless merchant of this loss " ..... 1660 

All losses are restored Son 30 14 

yet I have still the loss " 34 10 

A loss in love " 42 4 

my loss is my love's gain " 42 9 

my friend hath found that loss " 42 10 

store with loss, loss with store " 64 8 

drop in for an after-loss " 90 4 

Compared with loss of thee " 90 14 

live thou upon thy servant's loss " 146 9 

the loss thereof still fearing PP 1 10 

Wrought all ray loss " 18 14 

Lost — perfect, never lost again V A 408 

lost the fair discovery " 828 

had lost his power " 944 

what treasure hast thou lost " 1075 

Their virtue lost " 1131 

and all together lost R L 147 

lost a dearer thing than life " 687 

captive victorthat hath lost in gain " 730 

My honey lost, and I " 8.36 

that dear jewel I have lost " 1191 

but lost the dregs of life Son 74 9 

And the just pleasure lost " 121 3 

Him have I lost " 134 13 

my honest faith in thee is lost " 152 8 

Lost, vaded, broken, dead P P 13 6 

And as goods lost " 13 7 

once 's for ever lost " 13 11 

All my lady's love is lost " 18 10 

All our love is lost " 18 48 

Lot — bequeath not to their lot R L 534 

Loud — To stop the loud pursuers VA 688 

Anon their loud alarums " 700 

and my loud crying still Son 143 14 

Loudest— Let the bird of loudest lay P T 1 

Lour— still he lours and frets VA 75 

Lour'st — Nay, if thou lour'st on me Son 149 7 

Louring — His louring brows V A 183 

Love — but love he laugh'd to scorn " 4 

O, how quick is love " 38 

Love keeps his revels " 123 

Love is a spirit " 149 

Is love so light, sweet boy " 155 

seize love upon thy left " 158 

cries ' Fie, no more of love " 185 

What 'tis to love? how want of 

love tormenteth " 202 

Being judge in love " 220 

Love made those hollows " 243 



Love — ^Why, there Love lived V A 246 

Poor queen of love " 251 

He sees his love " ' 287 

He looks upon his love " 307 

Spurns at his love " 311 

His love, perceiving " 317 

Love-sick Love by pleading " 328 

love's fire doth assuage " 334 

love's deep groans " 377 

But when he saw his love " 393 

Who sees his true-love " 397 

' I know not love " 409 

My love to love is love but to dis- 
grace it " 412 

To love's alarms " 424 

should I be in love " 438 

Yet would my love " 442 

that breedeth love " 444 

For looks kill love, and love by 

looks reviveth " 464 

that by love so tbriveth " 466 

love did wittily prevent " 471 

if any love you owe me " 523 

Chiefly in love " 568 

Yet love breaks through " 576 

Tell me, love's master " 585 

the very lists of love " 595 

She's Love, she loves " 610 

To which Love's eyes " 632 

For where Love reigns " 649 

Distempering gentle Love " 653 

eats up Love's tender spring " 656 

For love can comment " 714 

in love with thee " 722 

If love have lent you " 775 

I hate not love, but your device 

in love " 789 

Call it not love, for Love " 793 

Love comforteth like sunshine " 799 

Love's gentle spring " 801 

Love surfeits not " 803 

Love is all truth " 804 

Leaves Love upon her back " 814 

How love makes young " 837 

How love is wise " 838 

tidings of her love " 867 

Hateful divorce of love " 932 

Love's golden arrow " 947 

love, how strange it seems " 985 

fearing my love's decease " 1002 

Fie, fie, fond love " 1021 

Sorrow on love " 1136 

all love's pleasure " 1140 

doth my love destroy " 1163 

They that love best their loves 

shall not " 1164 

kiss my sweet love's flower " 1188 

Of Collatine's fair love ' R L 7 

love's modest snow-white weed " 193 

I'll beg her love; but she " 241 

Self-love had never drown'd him " 266 

Love thrives not in the heart " 270 

Then Love and Fortune " 351 

Against love's fire fear's frost " 355 

untimely tears, her husband's love " 570 

still are fear'd for love " 611 

Yield to my love " 668 

Instead of love's coy touch " 669 

For Collatine's dear love " 821 



LOVE 



175 



LOVE 



Lore — ^Whose love of either R L 1165 

My resolution, love, shall be thy 

boast " 1193 

my lord, my love, my dear " 1293 

If ever, love, thy Lucrece " 1306 

Sweet love, what spite " 1600 

Aud entertain my love " 1629 

If thou my love's desire do contra- 
dict " 1631 

Of his self-love, to stop posterity Son 3 8 

No love toward others " 9 13 

thou bear'st love to any " 10 1 

fairer lodged than gentle love " 10 10 

for love of me " 10 13 

but, love, you are " 13 1 

dear my love, you know " 13 13 

Time for love of you " 15 13 
carve not with thy hours my love's 

fair brow " 19 9 
My love shall in my verse ever 

live young " 19 14 
Mine be thy love and thy love's 

use " 20 14 

O, let me, true in love " 21 9 

my love is as fair " 21 10 

O, therefore, love, be of thyself " 22 9 

ceremony of love's rite " 23 6 

mine own love's strength " 23 7 

of mi-ne own love's might " 23 8 

Who plead for love " 23 11 

what silent love hath writ " 23 13 

belongs to love's fine wit " 23 14 

Lord of my love " 26 1 

For thy sweet love remember'd " 29 13 

love's long-since-cancell'd woe " 30 7 
And there reigns love and all love's 

loving parts " 31 3 

Hath dear religious love stol'n " 31 6 

buried love doth live " 31 9 

Eeserve them for my love " 32 7 

this his love had brought " 32 11 

I'll read, his for his love " 32 14 

my love no whit disdaineth " 33 13 

which thy love sheds " 34 13 

is in my love and hate " 35 12 

undivided loves are one " 36 2 

In our two loves " 36 5 

alter not love's sole effect " 36 7 

hours from love's delight " 36 8 

my love engrafted to this store " 37 8 

And our dear love " 39 6 

with thoughts of love " 39 11 
Take all my loves, my love, yea, 

take them all , " 40 1 
No love, my love, that thou mayst 

true love call " 40 3 

if formylovethoumylovereceivest " 40 5 

my love thou usest " 40 6 

And yet, love knows " 40 11 

To bear love's wrong " 40 12 

A loss in love " 42 4 

my loss is my love's gain " 42 9 

embassy of love to thee " 45 6 

thine inward love of heart " 46 14 

Or heart in love " 47 4 

With my love's picture " 47 5 

thoughts of love doth share " 47 8 

thy picture or my love " 47 9 

When as thy love hath cast " 49 3 



Love — When love, converted Son 

Thus can my love " 

of perfect'st love being made " 
But love, for love, thus shall excuse " 

Sweet love, renew thy force " 

So, love, be thou " 

The spirit of love " 

Eeturn of love " 

So true a fool is love " 

O, no ! thy love " 

It is my love " 

sin of self-love possesseth all " 
Mine own self-love quite contrary " 

Against my love shall be " 

My sweet love's beauty " 

aud take my love away " 

my love may still shine bright " 

I leave my love alone " 

But let your love " 

After my death, dear love " 

O, lest your true love " 

That you for love " 

makes thy love more strong " 

O, know, sweet love " 

and you and love " 

So is my love still telling " 

I grant, sweet love " 

my love was my decay " 

And do so, love ; yet " 

whose love to you " 

Such is my love " 
Thou canst not, love, disgrace me " 

Thy love is better " 

than thy love will stay " 

upon that love of thine " 

Happy to have thy love " 

so love's face " 

May still seem love to me " 
in thy face sweet love should ever " 

If not from my love's breath " 

In my love's veins " 

my love's sweet face survey " 

Give my love fame faster " 

on my love depends " 

My love is strengthen'd " 

That love is merchandized " 

Our love was new " 

Let not my love " 

kind is my love to-day " 

of my true love control " 

My love looks fresh " 

That may express my love " 
So that eternal love in love's fresh 

case " 

conceit of love there bred " 

That is -my home of love " 

proved thee my best of love " 

A god in love " 

Your love and pity " 

And that your love " 

Love is a babe " 

Love is not love " 

Love's not Time's fool " 
Love alters not with his brief hours " 

upon your dearest love " 

and virtue of your love " 

Thus policy in love " 
And ruin'd love when it is built 

anew " 



49 


7 


51 


1 


51 


10 


51 


12 


56 


1 


56 


5 


56 


8 


56 


12 


57 


13 


61 


9 


61 


10 


62 


1 


62 


11 


63 


1 


63 


12 


64 


12 


65 


14 


66 


14 


71 


12 


72 


3 


72 


9 


72 


10 


73 


13 


76 


9 


76 


10 


76 


14 


79 


5 


80 


14 


82 


9 


85 


11 


88 


13 


89 


5 


91 


9 


92 


3 


92 


4 


92 


12 


93 


2 


93 


3 


93 


10 


99 


3 


99 


5 


100 


9 


100 


13 


101 


3 


102 


1 


102 


3 


102 


5 


105 


1 


105 


5 


107 


3 


107 


10 


108 


4 


108 


9 


108 


13 


109 


5 


110 


8 


110 


12 


112 


1 


114 


4 


115 


13 


116 


2 


116 


9 


116 


11 


117 


3 


117 


14 


118 


9 


119 


11 



LOVE 



176 



LOVE 



Love— thy dear love to score Son 122 10 

If my dear love " 124 1 

As subject to Time's love " 124 3 

I think my love as rare " 130 13 

to mate love groan " 131 6 

Thus far for love " 136 4 

fulfil the treasure of thy love " 136 5 
Make but ray name thy love, and 

love that still " 135 13 

Thou blind fool, Love " 137 1 

When my love sveears . " 138 1 

O, love's best habit " , 138 11 
And age in love loves not to have 

years told " 138 12 

ah, my love well knows " 139 9 

Love is my sin " 142 1 

And seal'd false bonds of love " 142 7 

Two loves I have " 144 1 

that Love's own hand " 145 1 

My love is as a fever " 147 1 

the physician to my love " 147 5 

what eyes hath Love " 148 1 

then love doth well denote " 148 7 

Love's eye is not so true " 148 8 

O, how can Love's eye he true " 148 9 

O, cunning Love " 148 13 

But, love, hate on " 149' 13 

raised love in me " 150 13 

Love is too young " 151 1 

conscience is born of love " 151 2 

Triumph in love " 151 8 

Her love for whose dear love " 151 14 

to me love swearing " 152 2 

after new love bearing " 152 4 

Oaths of thy love " 152 10 

this holy fire of love " 153 5 

Love's brand new-fired " 153 9 

Which from Love's fire " 154 10 
Love's fire heats water, water cools 

not love " 154 14 
Love to myself and to no love be- 
side L C 77 

Love lack'd a dwelling " 82 

For feasts of love " 181 

Love made them not " 185 

living in eternal love " 238 

Religious love put out Religion's eye " 250 

As compound love to physic " 259 

O most potential love " 2(54 

Love's arms are peace " 271 

When my love swears P P 1 1 
Out facing faults in love with 

love's ill rest "18 

But wherefore says my love "19 

O, love's best habit " 1 11 
And age in love loves not to have 

years told " 1 12 
Therefore I'll lie with love and 

love with me " 1 13 

in love thus smother'd be " 1 14 

Two loves I have "21 

thou a heavenly love "37 
If love make me forsworn, how 

shall I swear to love "51 

all in love forlorn "63 

Fair is my love "71 
her oaths of true love swearing "78 

Dreading my love " 7 10 

She burn'd with love " 7 13 



7 


14 


7 


15 


7 


16 


8 


3 


9 


1 


9 


7 


12 


10 


16 


5 


17 


2 


17 


18 


18 


5 


18 


10 


18 


11 


IS 


21 


18 


48 


20 


1 


20 


16 



Love — She burn'd out love P P 

She framed the love " 

She bade love last " 

Then must the love be great " 

when the fair queen of love " 

with more than love's good will " 

O, my love, my love is young " 

that love with love did fight " 

Love, whose month was ever May " 

Turning mortal for thy love " 

Love's denying " 

All my lady's love is lost " 

was firmly fix'd in love " 

Love hath forlorn me " 

love is lost, for Love is dead " 

Live with me and be my love " 

Live with me and be my love " 
If that the world and love were 

young " 20 17 

To live with thee and be thy love " 20 20 

Love and constancy is dead P T 22 

Number there in love was slain " 28 

So between them love did shine " 33 

Love hath reason, reason none " 47 

Co-supremes and stars of love " 51 

Love — She loves him best VA 77 

she cannot choose but love " 79 

What 'tis to love? how want of 

love tormenteth " 202 

To love a cheek that smiles " 252 

O, learn to love " 407 

my ears would love " 433 

She's Love, she loves " 610 

That if I love thee " 660 

They that love best their loves 

shall not " 1164 

loves no stops nor rests H L 1124 

that love and am beloved Son 25 13 

how I do love thee " 26 13 

I love thee in such sort " 36 13 
Thou dost love her, because thou 

kuow'st I love her "42 6 

then she loves but me alone " 42 14 

Since why to love I can allege " 49 14 
For canker vice the sweetest buds 

doth love " 70 7 

for I love you so " 71 6 

that you should love " 72 2 

to love things nothing worth " 72 14 

To love that well " 73 14 

For I must ne'er love him " 89 14 

I love thee in such sort " 96 13 
I love not less, though less the 

show appear "102 2 

That mine eye loves it " 114 14 

I could not love you dearer " 115 2 

Now I love you best " 115 10 

I love to hear her speak " 130 9 

Thine eyes I love " 132 1 
Make but my name thy love, and 

love that still " 136 13 
And age in love loves not to have 

years told " 138 12 

not to love, yet, love, to tell " 140 6 

I do not love thee " 141 1 
my heart that loves what they 

despise " 141 3 

Be it lawful I love thee " 142 9 

say I love thee not " 149 1 



LOVE 



177 



LUCRETIUS 



Love — make me love thee more Son 150 9 

I love what others do abhor " 150 11 
And age in love loves not to have 

years told PP X 12 
If love make me forsworn, how 

shall I swear to love "51 

do not love that wrong " 5 13 
One knight loves both " 8 14 
So they loved, as love in twain P T 25 

Loved — Hunting he loved V A 4 

yet she is not loved " 610 

make thee only loved for fear R L 610 

Their images I loved Son 31 13 

1 loved her dearly " 42 2 
His rider loved not speed " 50 8 
are loved of more and less " 96 3 
nor no man ever loved " 116 14 
So they loved, as love in twain P T 25 

Love-god— The little Love-god Son 154 1 

Lore-kindling — his love-kindling fire" 153 3 

Love-lacking — Love-lacking vestals V A 752 

Ljj;reless — To leave the master . ... P P 16 6 
Loveliness — Unthrifty loveliness, 

why dost thou spend Son 4 1 

Lovely — more lovely than a man V A 9 

These lovely caves " 247 

Calls back the lovely April Son 3 10 
The lovely gaze where every eye "52 

Thou art more lovely " 18 2 

beauteous and lovely youth " 54 13 

thy lovely argument " 79 5 

How sweet and lovely " 95 1 

ladies dead and lovely knights " 106 4 

O thou, my lovely boy " 126 1 

lovely, fresh, and green P P 4. 2 
With many a lovely look "43 

Lover— For lovers say, the heart VA 329 

And like a lowly lover " 350 

must not repel a lover " 573 

For lovers' hours are long " 842 

trophies of my lovers gone Son 31 10 

rude lines of thy deceased lover " 32 4 

and dwell in lovers' eyes " 55 14 

though my lover's life " 63 12 
Thy lovers withering as thy sweet 

self grow'st " 126 4 

Was this a lover PP 7 17 

That the lover, sick to death " 17 7 

Lover'd — would not be so lover'd L O 320 

Love-sick — By this, the .... queen VA 175 

That love-sick Love "' 328 

Lovest — Why lovest thou that Son 8 3 

that thou none lovest " 10 4 

And then thou lovest me " 136 14 

Tell me thou lovest elsewhere " 139 5 

as thou lovest those " 142 9 

Those that can see thou lovest " 149 14 

Because thou lovest the one P P 8 4 
Thou lovest to hear "89 

plainly say thou lovest her well " 19 11 

Love-suit — my love-suit, sweet, fulfil &)?i 136 4 

Loving — vestalsandself-lovingnunsF.4 752 

the loving swine " 1115 

there is no hate in loving P L 240 

and tell my loving tale " 480 

apparel on my tatter'd loving Son 26 11 

and all love's loving parts " 31 3 
vouchsafe me but this loving 

thought « 32 9 
12 



RL 



Son 
LC . 
RL . 

• VA . 



Loving — Loving offenders, thus I 
will 
Self so self-loving were iniquity 
all my loving thoughts on me 
and most most loving breast 
and loving mourners be 
grounded on sinful loving 
In loving thee thou know'st 
should use like loving charms 

Low — And being low never relieved 

by any VA 
Ne'er settled equally, but high or 

low " 
But low shrubs wither 
low vassals to thy state 
villain court'sies to her low 
Some high, some low 
From his low tract 
botli high and low 

Low-declined — My .... honour 

Lower — Stray lower, where the 
pleasant fountains lie 

Lowly — And like a lowly lover " 

Loyal — tremble with her loyal fear R L 
Since thou couldst not defend thy 

loyal dame " 

when I fear'd I was a loyal wife " 

And the turtle's loyal breast P T 

Luck — of good or evil luck Son 

Lucrece — Lucrece the chaste R L 

his boast of Lucrece' sovereignty " 

in Lucrece' face was seen " 

with modest Lucrece " 

So Lucrece must I force " 

marcheth to Lucrece' bed " 

by Lucrece' side " 

And holy-thoughted Lucrece " 

' Lucrece,' quoth he " 

But cloudy Lucrece " 

Poor Lucrece' cheeks " 

whereof in Lucrece view " 

bid fair Lucrece speak " 

' O, peace !' quoth Lucrece " 

If ever, love, thy Lucrece " 

For Lucrece thought " 

is Lucrece come " 

Lucrece spends her eyes " 

And therefore Lucrece swears " 

So Lucrece, set a-work " 

Who finds his Lucrece " 

thy Lucrece is not free " 

The adulterate death of Lucrece " 

For she that was thy Lucrece " 

Till Lucrece' father " 

as pitying Lucrece' woes " 

now Lucrece is unlived " 

Then live, sweet Lucrece " 

Lucrece' bleeding stream " , 

holding Lucrece' life " . 

the knife from Lucrece' side " . 

Burying in Lucrece' wound " . 

And by chaste Lucrece' soul " . 

to bear dead Lucrece thence " . 

Lucrctia — Lucretia's glove, wherein 

her needle sticks " . 

Lucretia, marking what he tells " . 

Lucretius — dear daughter,' old Lu- 
cretius cries " . 
bids Lucretius give his sorrow " ., 



''on 42 


5 


" 62 


12 


" 88 


10 


" 110 


14 


" 132 


3 


" 142 


2 


" 152 


1 


P 11 


8 



708 



... 1139 

... 665 

... 666 

... 1338 

... 1412 

7 12 

... 21 

... 1705 



,. 234 

,. 350 
,. 261 

. 1034 
,. 1048 
.. 57 
4 3 
7 
,. 36 
,. 64 
,. 123 
,. 182 
,. 301 
,. 381 
,. 384 
,. 512 
. 1084 
. 1217 
. 1261 
. 1268 
. 1284 
. 1306 
. 1344 
. 1443 
. 1457 
. 1462 
. 1496 
. 1585 
. 1624 
. 1645 
. 1682 
. 1732 
. 1747 
. 1754 
, 1770 
, 1774 
, 1805 
1807 
1810 
1839 
1850 

317 
510 

1751 
1773 



LUCRETIUS 



178 



MADRIGAL 



Lucretius — ' 0,' quoth Lucretius, ' I 

did give -R L 1800 

Lullaby — Then, lullaby, the learned 

man PP IG 15 

Lnng — that burning lungs did raise L C 228 

his spongy lungs bestow'd " 326 

Lure — As falcons to the lure V A 1027 

Lurk — lurk in mine eye " 644 

embers hid, lurks to aspire R L 5 

folly lurk in gentle breasts " 851 

can lurk in such a look " 1535 

'can lurk' from 'cannot' took " 1537 

tricks and toys that in them lurk P P 19 39 

Lnrk'd — lurk'd like two thieves V A 1086 

Lurking — "UTio sees the .... serpent R L 362 

Lust — though not in lust V A 42 

Careless lust stirs up " 556 

sweating Lust on earth " 794 

Lust's effect is tempest " 800 

Lust's winter comes ere summer " 802 

Lust Uke a glutton dies " „... 803 

Lust full of forged Ues " 804 

to obtain his lust R L 156 

"While lust and murder wakes " 16S 

with lust's foul charm " 173 

armour of still-slaughter'd lust " 188 

choked by unresisted lust " 282 

Stuff up his lust " 297 

His rage of lust " 424 

Tears harden lust " 560 

school where Lust shall learn " 617 

Kot to seducing lust " 639 

Black lust, dishonour, shame " 654 

light and lust are deadly enemies " 674 

O, that prone lust should stain " 684 

And Lust, the thief " _... 693 

While Lust is in his pride " 705 

She bears the load of lust " 734 

as knowing Tarquin's lust " 1354 

the Greeks with little lust " 1384 

Thy heat of lust, fond Paris " 1473 

And one man's lust " 1489 

The loathsome act of lust " «... 1636 

lust came evidence to swear " 1650 

Is lust in action ; and till action 
lust Son 129 2 

Lust-breathed — Lust-breathed Tar- 

quin leaves R L 3 

Lustful — with .... language broken T"^^ 47 

And now this lustfullord RL 169 

lode-star to his lustful eye " 179 

Lustily— chant it lustily VA 869 

Lustj' — lusty courser's rein " 31 

lusty, young, and proud " 260 

treasure of thy lusty days Son 2 6 

and lusty leaves quite gone "57 

Lute— Upon the lute doth ravish P P S 6 

Phcebus' lute, the queen of music " 8 10 

Luxury — in heart-wish'd luxury L C 314 

Lying — Love-god lying once asleep Son 154 1 

Mad — ^Being mad before VA 249 

As they were mad " 323 

Of mad mischances " 738 

Her eyes are mad " 1062 

It shall be raging-mad " 1151 

let the thief run mad R L 997 

Sometime 'tis mad " 1106 

mad with their sweet melody " 1108 



Mad — ^Who, mad that sorrow should 

his use control • R L 1781 

to make the taker mad Son 129 8 
Mad in pursuit, and in possession so " 129 9 
I should grow mad " 140 9 
JIad slanderers by mad ears be- 
lieved be " 140 12 
frantic-mad with evermore unrest " 147 10 

Madam—' Madam, ere I was up R L 1277 

Madding — of this madding fever Son 119 8 

Made — Kature that made thee VA 11 

resistance made him fret " 69 

Torches are made to light " 163 

Love made those hollows " 243 

his acts made plain " 359 

made mine hard " 378 

And once made perfect " 408 

thyself art made away " 763 

then apologies be made R L 31 

Made glorious by his manly chiv- 
alry " 109 

and made her thrall " 725 

which in thy reign are made " 804 

If that be made a theme " 822 

the ether made divine " 1164 

made me stop my breath " 1180 

Make weak-made women tenants " 1260 

made for Priam's Troy " 1367 

made herself herself detest " 1566 

vow, which Brutus made before " 1847 

This were to be new made Son 2 13 

hath not made for store " 11 9 

So I, made lame " 37 3 

mine eyes be blessed made " 43 9 

My life, being made of four " 45 7 

being made from thee " 50 8 

of perfect'st love being made " 51 10 

whereof are ye made " 53 1 

are sweetest odours made " 54 12 

that made me first your slave " 58 1 

And art made tongue-tied " 66 9 

dead fleece made another gay " 68 8 

what nature made so clear " 84 10 

made myself a motley " 110 2 

Made old offences " 110 4 

by evU still made better " 119 10 

Made more or less " 123 12 

that she is made of truth " 138 1 
made them swear against the thing 

they see " 152 12 

and made him her place L C 82 

made fairer by their place " 117 

and made their wills obey " 133 

Love made them not " 185 

smiled or made some moan " 217 

made the blossoms dote " 235 

that she is made of truth P P 1 1 

tarriance for Adonis made "64 

which a grove of myrtles made " 21 4 

Made me think upon mine own " 21 18 

Whereupon it made this threne P T 49 

Madly — Wbich madly hurries her VA 904 

Is madly toss'd RL 171 

desire thus madly led " 300 

Madmen — My thoughts and my dis- 
course as madmen's are Son 147 11 
Madness — And in my madness " 140 10 
Madrigal — Melodious birds sing mad- 
rigals PP 20 8 



MAID 



179 



MAKE 



Uaid — she hoarsely calls her maid H L 1214 

cheeks unto her maid seem so " 1217 

Even so the maid " 1228 

Which makes the maid weep " 1232 

ere I was up,' replied the maid " 1277 

if your maid may be so bold " 1282 

Her maid is gone " 1296 

A maid of Dian's Son 153 2 

a fickle maid full pale L C 5 

he 'gan besiege me :' Gentle maid " 177 

He preach'd pure maid " 315 

pervert a reconciled maid " 329 

did bear the maid away P P 16 14 

Maiden— quench the burning VA 50 

A pair of maiden worlds R L 408 

the worm intrude the maiden bud " 848 

And many maiden gardens Son 16 6 
maiden virtue rudely strumpeted " 66 6 

but in her maiden hand " 154 4 
maidens' eyes stuck over all his 

face L C 81 

Maiden-tonerued — For he was " 100 

Slaim — did win whom he would .... " 312 

Main — once in the main of light Son 60 5 

win of the watery main " 64 7 

On your broad main " 80 8 
Maintain — this general evil they 

maintain " 121 3 

•Maintained— rights in Eome EL 1838 

Majesty — With gentle majesty VA 278 

ariseth in his majesty " 856 

in plaits of majesty i2 L ....'. 93 

for exiled majesty's repeal " 640 

In great commanders grace and 

majesty " 1387 

his sacred majesty Son 7 4 

given grace a double majesty " 78 8 

Make — makes amain unto him VA 5 

Make use of time " 129 

I'll make a shadow " 191 

they make no battery " 426 

clapping makes it red " 468 

bargains may I make " 512 

purchase if thou make " 515 

wilt thou make the match " 586 

make them droop with grief " 666 

make my faint heart " 669 

To make the cunning hounds " 686 

shadow makes him stop " 706 

To make thee hate " 711 

make true men thieves " 724 

Make modest Dian " 725 

makes me like you " 774 

Make verbal repetition " 831 

makes young men thrall " 837 

that makes him bright " 862 

to make her stay " 873 

fear whereof doth make liim shake " 880 

make them wet again " 966 

makes thee ridiculous " 988 

makes the wound seem three " 1064 

That makes more gashes " 1066 

shall it make most weak " 1145 

Make the young old " 1152 

Yet their ambition makes R L 68 

He makes excuses " 114 

Make something nothing " 154 

must doting Tarquin make " 155 

can my invention make " .^... 225 



Make — And with good thoughts 

makes dispensation R L 248 

did make her colour rise " 257 

The wind wars with his torch to 

make him stay " 311 

march'd on to make his stand " 438 

The sight which makes " 455 

To make the breach " 469 

makes the lily pale " 478 

and makes a pause " 541 

That to his borrow'd bed he make 

retire " 573 

' This deed wiU make thee " 610 

Make slow pursuit " 696 

Make war against " 774 

Let their exhaled unwholesome 

breaths make sick " 779 

and make perpetual night " 784 

As palmers' chat makes short " 791 

' Make me not object " 806 

To make the child " 954 

to make amends " 961 

To make him curse " 970 

To make him moan " 977 

That makes him honour'd " 1005 

To make more vent " 1040 

Make her moans mad " 1108 

doth make the wound " 1116 

Make thy sad grove " 1129 

I make some hole " 1175 

abridgement of my will I make " 1198 

the knife that makes my wound " 1201 

AATiich makes the maid weep " 1232 

Make weak-made women " 1260 

cannot make it less " 1285 

dares not thereof make discovery " 1314 

Deep sounds make lesser noise " 1329 

did make him more amazed " 1356 

and make them bold " 1559 

to make mine own excuse " 1653 

his sorrows, make a saw " 1672 

make conquest of the stronger " 1767 

sorrow's tide, to make it more "■ 1789 

and make my old excuse Son 2 11 

Make sweet some vial " 6 3 

make worms thine heir " 6 14 

Make thee another self " 10 13 

would make the world away "11 8 

do I question make " 12 9 

Time's scythe can make defence " 12 13 

Make war upon this bloody tyrant " 16 2 

Can make you live " 16 12 

And make the earth devour " 19 2 

Make glad and sorry seasons " 19 5 

May make seem bare " 26 6 

Makes black night beauteous " 27 12 

doth nightly make grief's strength " 28 14 

make me travel forth " 34 2 

All men make faults " 35 5 

I make my love engrafted " 37 8 

how to make one twain " 39 13 

shadow shadows doth make bright " 43 5 

make some special instant " 52 11 

Makes summer's welcome " 56 14 

how happy you make those " 57 12 

make towards the pebbled shore " 60 1 

should make you woe " 71 8 

makes thy love more strong " 73 13 

To make me tongue-tied " SO 4 



MAKE 



180 



MAN 



Make— your epitaph to make Son 81 1 

makes your praises worse " 84 14 

the spite of fortune, make me bow " 90 3 

and me most wretched make " 91 14 

dost thou mate the shame " 95 1 

make me any summer's story " 98 7 

And make Time's spoils " 100 12 

Make answer, Muse " 101 5 

To make him much outlive " 101 11 

To make him seem long hence " 101 14 

But makes antiquity " 108 12 

To make of monsters " 114 5 

to make our appetites " 118 1 

rather make them born " 123 7 

to make the taker mad " 129 8 

proudly make them cruel " 131 2 

the power to make love groan " 131 6 

makes my heart to groan " 133 1 

to make thy large 'Will' more " 135 12 

Make but my name " 136 13 

she that makes me sin " 141 14 

makes all swift dispatch " 143 3 

Love's own hand did make " 145 1 

To make me give the lie " 150 3 

to make me love thee more " 150 9 

■what stop he makes L C 109 

To make the weeper laugh " 124 

to make our wits more keen " 161 

makes her absence valiant " 245 

that you make 'gainst mine " 277 

and yet do question make " 321 

If love make me forsworn PP 5 1 

and makes his book thine eyes "55 

lute, the queen of music, makes " 8 10 

to make me wander thither " 14 10 

make thee a bed of roses " 20 9 

Makest— makest thou to be gone V A 188 

And makest fair reputation R L 623 

Thou makest the vestal " 883 

makest waste in niggarding Son 1 12 

Thou makest faults graces " 96 4 

That thy sable gender makest P T IS 

Maketh— too sensible thy passion 

maketh R L 1678 

thus maketh mine untrue Son. 113 14 

Making — Makingthemredandpale F^4 21 

making her cheeks all wet " 83 

Making my arms his field " 108 

Making it subject ' " 737 

Making such sober action R L 1403 

Making a famine Son 1 7 

Making a couplement " 21 5 

Making no summer " 68 11 

Not making worse what nature " 84 10 

Making his style admired " 84 12 

Making their tomb " 86 4 

on better judgement making " 87 12 

making no defence " 89 4 

Making lascivious comments " 95 '6 

making beautiful old rhyme " 106 3 

Making dead wood " 128 12 

making addition thus " 135 4 

Makeless — like a makeless wife "94 

Malady — not the least of all these 

maladies VA 745 

our maladies unseen Son 118 3 

Against strange maladies " 153 8 

Malcontent — like a melancholy .... F^l 313 

Man — more lovely than a man " 9 



Man— Thing like a man VA 214 

Thou art no man, though of a 

man's complexion " 215 

For men will kiss " 216 

and I a man " 369 

make true men thieves " 724 

young men thrall and old men dote " 837 

men's minds confound " 1048 

The eyes of men without an orator iJ i 30 

that meaner men should vaunt " 41 

A martial man to be " 200 

or an old man's saw " 244 

descried in men's nativity " 538 

If ever man were moved " 587 

Men's faults do seldom " 633 

man, that cofiers up his gold " 855 

the child a man, the man a child " 954 

The mightier man " 1004 

Since men prove beasts " 1148 

For men have marble " 1240 

In men, as in a rough-grown grove " 1249 

Though men can cover crimes " 1252 

No man inveigh against " 1254 

With men's abuses " 1259 

One of my husband's men " 1291 

The very eyes of men " 1383 

Here one man's hand " 1415 

And one man's lust " 1489 

That no man could distinguish " 1785 

men as plants increase Son 15 5 

yourself in eyes of men " 16 12 

like old men of less truth " 17 10 

So long as men can breathe " 18 13 

pattern to succeeding men " 19 12 

A man in hue " 20 7 

AVhich steals men's eyes " 20 8 

with fortune and men's eyes " 29 1 

this man's art and that man's scope " 29 7 

by the height of happier men " 32 8 
For no man well of such a salve 

can speak " 34 7 

All men make faults " 35 5 

in men's eyes shall lie " 81 8 

even in the mouths of men " 81 14 

of all men's pride I boast " 91 12 

nor no man ever loved " 116 14 

All men are bad " 121 14 

that leads men to this hell " 129 14 

in the bay where all men ride " 137 6 

As testy sick men " 140 7 

the likeness of a man " 141 11 

is a man right fair " 144 3 

Death that feeds on men " 146 13 

true as all men's " 148 8 

which yet men prove " 153 7 

For men diseased " 154 12 

A reverend man L C 57 

Small show of man " 92 

Yet, if men moved him " 101 

and often men would say " 106 

This man's untrue " 169 

is a man right fair PP 2 3 

the learned man hath got the lady 

gay " 16 15 

More in women than in men " 18 18 

Like a thousand vanquish'd men " 18 35 

' Had women been so strong as men " 19 23 

women still to strive with men " 19 43 

Every man will be thy friend " 21 35 



MAN 



181 



MASTER 



Man — No man -n'ill supplj' tliy want P P 71 38 

Mauai^e — He will not manage her V A 598 

manage by the well-doing steed L C 112 

Mane — his braided hanging mane V A 271 

Thin mane, thick tail " 298 

through his mane and tail " 305. 

Maiig-ling — reprehends her .... eye V A 1065 

Manifold — With objects manifold L C 216 

Manly — Made glorious by his manly 

chivalry R L 109 

Here manly Hector faints " 1486 

Till manly shame " 1777 

Manner— their manners most ex- 
pressly told " 1397 

with manners may I sing Son 39 1 

in manners holds her still " 85 1 

which public manners breeds " 111 4 

manner of my pity-wanting pain " 140 4 

Mansion — Her mansion batter'd R L 1171 

what a mansion have those vices 

got Son 95 9 
upon thy fading mansion spend " 146 6 
Of lands and mansions L C 138 

Mantle — his .... rudely o'er his armiJ L 170 

and throws his mantle by P P 6 9 

Manual — Set thy seal-manual V A 516 

Many— The many musits " 683 

trodden on by many " 707 

Like many clouds " 972 

Alas, how many bear such shame- 
ful blows R L 832 

Many a dry drop seem'd " 1.375 

The scalps of many, almost hid " 1413 

Stood many Trojan mothers " 1431 

Many she sees where cares have " 1445 

the public plague of many moe " 1479 

why should so many fall " 1483 

these many lives confounds " 1489 

Till after many accents " 1719 

being many seeming one Son 8 13 

thou art beloved of many " 10 8 

And many maiden gardens " 16 6 

the lack of many a thing " 30 3 

of many a vanish'd sight " 30 8 

many a holy and obsequious tear " 31 5 
That due of many now is thine " 31 12 
Full many a glorious morning " 33 1 

And, proud of many " 67 12 

In many's looks the false heart's 

history " 93 7 

How many lambs might the stern 

wolf betray " 96 9 

How many gazers might'st thou 

lead " 96 11 

many nymphs that vow'd " 154 3 

many legions of true hearts " 154 6 

had she many a one L C 43 

Crack'd many a ring " 45 

many a blasting hour " 72 

Many there were that did " 134 

many have, that never touch'd " 141 

many bulwarks builded " 152 

Among the many that mine eyes " 190 

from many a several fair " 206 

with many a lovely look PP 4 3 

How many tales to please me " 7 

Map — triumph in the map of death R L 402 

The face, that map which deep 
impression bears " 1712 



Map — the map of days outworn Son 68 1 

And him as for a map " 68 13 

Mar — Mar not the thing R L 578 

To mar the subject Son 103 10 

Marble — though marble wear with 

raining R L 560 

For men have marble " 1240 

are they form'd as marble will " 1241 

Not marble, nor the gilded Son 55 1 

March — thy misty vapours march R L 782 

To march in ranks Son 32 12 

MarcliM — march'd on to make R L 438 

bold Hector march'd to field " 1430 

Marclieth— marcheth to Lucrece' bed " 301 

Marching — marching on with trem- 
bling paces " 1391 

Mare — my palfrey from the mare V A 384 

Margent — Writ in the glassy mar- 
gents of such books R L 102 

upon whose weeping margent L C 39 

Marigold — Her eyes like marigolds P L 397 

But as the marigold Soti 25 6 

Marjoram — And buds of marjoram " 99 7 

Mark — Didst thou not mark my face F^ 643 

Mark the poor wretch " 680 

My will that marks thee R L 487 

to mark how slow time goes ' " 990 

Mark how one string Son 8 9 

Mark how with my neglect " 112 12 

I sit and mark P P 15 5 

Mark — Thy mark is feeble age V A 941 

mark of every open eye R L 520 

For marks descried in men's na- 
tivity " 538 

true mark of modesty " 1220 

slander's mark was ever yet the 

fair Son 70 2 

it is an ever-fixed mark " 116 5 

If knowledge be the mark P P 5 7 

Marketh — advisedly she marketh VA 457 

Marking— She, marking them, begins " 835 

marking what he tells R L 570 

Marr'd — To mend the hurt that his 

unkindness marr'd V A 478 

Marriage— that hath engirt his R L 221 

to the marriage of true minds Son 116 1 

Married — By unions married " 8 6 

wert not married to my muse " 82 1 

It was married chastity P T 61 

Marrow — my marrow burning V A 142 

Marrow-eating — The .... sickness " 741 

Mars — Nor Mars his sword Son 55 7 

how god Mars did try her PP 11 3 

Mai-tial- A martial man to be RL 200 

Mai'tyr'd — lies martyr'd with disgrace " 802 

Marvel — Therefore no marvel VA 390 

No marvel then, though I Son 148 11 

Mask— To mask their brows R L 794 

Masked — The region cloud hath 

mask'd him from me Son 33 12 

their masked buds discloses " 54 8 

mask'd not thy show " 70 13 

Masonry — root out the work of ... . " 55 6 

Master — His testy master V A 319 

Tell me, love's master, shall we 

meet " 585 

asks the weary caitiff for his master " 014 

That liked of her master PP 16 2 

To leave the master loveless " 16 6 



MASTER 



182 



ME 



Master — beauty as you master now Son 106 8 

Master'd — with a leathern rein V A 392 

to be master'd by his young R L 863 

Mastering — For mastering her VA 114 

mastering what not strives L C 240 

Master-mistress — the master - mis- 
tress of my passion Son 20 2 

Match — wilt thou make the match V A 586 

shall not match his woe " 1140 

Matclietli — thy odour matcheth not 

thy show Son 69 13 

Mate — In the possession of his beau- 
teous mate R L 18 

Mated — is mated with delays V A 909 

Matter — ' No matter where,' quoth he " 715 

As dry combustious matter " 1162 

mistook the matter so R L 1826 

No matter then although Son 44 5 
Then lack'd I matter " 86 14 
but waking no such matter " 87 14 
a plenitude of subtle matter L C 302 

Maturity — Crawls to maturity Son 60 6 

Maund — favours from a maund she 

drew L C 36 

Maw — and pine the maw VA 602 

May — sweet boy, and may it be " 155 

That thine may live " 172 

by pleading may be blest " 328 

sorrow may be said " 333 

Long may they kiss " 505 

May say, the plague is banish'd " 510 

bargains may I make " 512 

that he may depart " 578 

much as may be jiroved " 608 

may be compared well " 701 

May lend thee light " 864 

yes, it may; thou hast " 939 

What may a heavy groan advantage " 950 

may the better thrive " 1011 

that they may surprise R L 166 

sorrow may on this arise " 186 

May feel her heart " 465 

foul sin may say " 629 

never may behold " 746 

where it may find " 760 

May set at noon " 7S4 

May likewise be " 805 

Tarquin's eye may read the mot " 830 

where he the lamb may get " 878 

where none may spy him " 881 

his suit may be obtained " 898 

stars may hide them " 1008 

The crow may bathe • " 1009 

1 may convey this troubled soul " 1176 

That he may vow " 1179 

may be so bold " 1282 

may be call'd a hell " 1287 

Collatine may know " 1312 

may grace the fashion " 1319 

her beauty I may tear " 1472 

that we may give redress " 1603 

may be imagined " 1622 

'How may this forced stain be 

wiped " 1701 

May my pure mind with the foul 

act dispense " 1704 

May any terms acquit me " 1706 

Yet neither may possess " 1794 

widow well may keep Son 9 7 



May— that I may change Son 10 9 

beauty still may live " 10 14 

Where I may not remove " 25 14 

May make seem bare " 26 6 

may I dare to boast " 26 13 

Suns of the world may stain " 33 14 
I may not evermore acknowledge 

thee " 36 9 

with manners may I sing " 39 1 

separation I may give " 39 7 

yet it may be said " 42 2 

more blest may be the view " 56 12 

Where you may be " 57 10 
You yourself may privilege your 

time " 58 10 

my love may still shine bright " 65 14 

your true love may seem " 72 9 

the world may see my pleasure " 75 8 

May still seem love to me " 93 3 

mine eye may be deceived " 104 12 

that ink may character " 108 1 

That may express my love " 108 4 

I may be straight " 121 11 
May time disgrace and wretched 

minutes kill " 126 8 

She may detain, but not still keep " 126 10 

That I may not be so " 140 13 

Thy pity may deserve " 142 12 

Suspect I may " 144 10 
My soul doth tell my body that he 

may " 151 7 

there may be aught applied L C 68 

may her suffering ecstasy assuage " 69 

counsel may stop awhile " 159 

with acture they may be " 185 

Suspect I may, yet not P P 2 10 

'T may be she joy'd to jest " 14 9 

'T may be again " 14 10 

thy cheeks may blow " 17 9 

Where thy desert may merit praise " 19 27 

pleasures may thee move " 20 15 

Truth may seem, but cannot be FT 62 

May — the darling buds of May Son 18 3 

oft 'twixt May and April L C 102 

Love whose month was ever May P P VI 2 

In the merry month of May " 21 2 

Mayst — mayst thou well be tasted VA 128 

thou revenged mayst be R L 1194 

Thou mayst call thine Son 11 4 

where thou mayst prove " 26 14 

that thou mayst true love call " 40 3 

thou mayst come and part " 48 12 

thou mayst in me behold " 73 1 

this learning mayst thou taste " 77 4 
by the dial's shady stealth mayst 

know " 77 7 

mayst without attaint o'erlook " 82 2 

that thou mayst take " , 91 13 

Thou mayst be false " 92 14 

mayst thou be denied " 142 14 

thou mayst have thy ' Will " 143 13 

Maze — with a winding maze R L 1151 

Me — why dost abhor me VA 138 

Bid me discourse " 145 

trees support me " 152 

draw me through the sky " 153 

I list to sport me " 154 

'Ay me,' quoth Venus " 187 

fire that burneth me " 196 



ME 



183 



ME 



Me — shouldst contemn me this VA 205 

Give me one kiss " 209 

' Give me my hand " 373 

' Give me my heart " 374 

O give it me " 375 

and let me go " 379 

leave me here alone " 382 

Let me excuse thy courser " 403 

done me double wrong " 429 

Each part in me " 436 

feeling were bereft me " 439 

very smell "were left me " 441 

thou didst kill me, kill me once 

again " 499 

buys my heart from me " 517 

if any love you owe me " 523 

seek not to know me " 525 

Kow let me say " 535 

Tell me, love's master " 585 

you crush me : let me go " 611 

to withhold me so " 612 

But that thou told'st me " 614 

be ruled by me " 673 

thou hear'st me moralize " 712 

Leave me, and then " 716 

makes me like you " 774 

' Ay me !' she cries " 833 

Yet pardon me, I felt " 998 

To cipher me B L 207 

thou shalt charge me " 226 

' She took me kindly " 253 

assist me in the act " 350 

Shall plead for me " 480 

for his sake spare me " 582 

for thine own sake leave me " 583 

do not then ensnare me " 584 

do not deceive me " 585 

1 complain me " 598 

to blush with me " 792 

Make me not object to the tell-tale 

Day " 806 

Tarquin wronged me " 819 

thine honour lay in me " 834 

From me by strong assault " 835 

have come to me " 916 

O, hear me then " 930 

thou gave^t me to repose " 933 

and enchained me " 934 

Teach me to curse him " 996 

For me, I force not " 1021 

doth me no right " 1027 

to do me good " 1028 

to rid me of this shame " 1031 

hath Tarquin rifled me " 1050 

For me, I am the mistress of my fate " 1069 

Ay me ! the bark peel'd " 1167 

made me stop my breath " 1180 

read it in me " 1195 

think no shame of me " 1204 

mine own would do me good " 1274 

But tell me, girl, when went " 1275 

Go, get me hither paper " 1289 

speed to come and visit me " 1307 

So, I commend me " 1308 

Show me the strumpet " 1471 

To me came Tarquin armed " 1544 

In me moe woes " 1615 

might be done to me " 1623 

0, teach me how to make " 1653 



Me— this refuge let me find 
Lucrece, now attend me 
suppose thou dost defend me 
the help that thou shalt lend me 
your honourable faiths to me 
stain be wiped from me 
acquit me from this chance 
to give this wound to nre 
this end from me derived 
Shows me a bare-boned death 
But kneel with me 
for love of me 

by addition me of thee defeated 
So is it not with me 
0, let me, true in love 
And then believe me 
persuade me I am old 
as thine in me 
Thou gavest me thine 
Mine eyes have drawn thy shape, 

and thine for me 
Points on me graciously 
To show me worthy 
where thou mayst prove me 
I haste me to my bed 
shake hands to torture me 
Wishing me like to one 
parts of me to thee did give 
hast all the all of me 
O, then vouchsafe me 
mask'd him from me now 
make me travel forth 
o'ertake me in my way 
sourly robs from me 
Let me confess 
that do with me remain 
by me be borne alone 
public kindness honour me 
then ten times happy me 
if aught in me 
all the better part of me 
Kill me with spites 
Ay me ! but yet thou 
beauty being false to me 
touches me more nearly 
doth she abuse me 
lay on me this cross 
she loves but me alone 
dreams do show thee me 
thought kills me 
recounting it to me 
art present still with me 
And scarcely greet me 
do I ensconce me here 
To leave poor me 
The beast that bears me 
to bear that weight in me 
More sharp to me 
should I haste me thence 
made me iirst your slave 
O, let me suffer 
Show me your image 
and idle hours in me 
From me far off 
shows me myself indeed 
Buin hath taught me 
No longer mourn for me 
If thinking on me 
And mock you with me 



RL 


1654 




1682 




1684 




16S5 




1690 




1701 




1706 




1722 




1755 




1761 




1830 


Son 10 


13 


" 20 


11 


" 21 


1 


" 21 


9 


" 21 


10 


" 22 


1 


" 22 


7 


" 22 


14 


" 24 


10 


" 26 


10 


« 26 


12 


" 26 


14 


" 27 


1 


" 23 


6 


" 29 


5 


" 31 


11 


» 31 


14 


" 32 


9 


" 33 


12 


" 34 


2 


" 34 


3 


" 35 


14 


" 36 


1 


" 36 


3 


" 36 


4 


" 36 


11 


" 37 


14 


" 38 


5 


" 39 


2 


" 40 


14 


" 41 


9 


" 41 


14 


" 42 


4 


" 42 


7 


" 42 


12 


" 42 


14 


" 43 


14 


" 44 


9 


" 45 


12 


" 47 


10 


" 49 


6 


" 49 


9 


" 49 


13 


" 50 


5 


" 50 


6 


" 50 


12 


" 51 


3 


" 58 


1 


" 58 


5 


" 59 


7 


" 61 


7 


" 61 


14 


" 62 


9 


" 64 


11 


" 71 


1 


" 71 


8 


" 71 


14 



ME 



184 



ME 



Me — What merit lived in me Son 

forget me quite " 
For you in me can nothing worthy 

prove " 

more for me than mine " 

speak well of me untrue " 

to shame nor me nor you " 

thou mayst in me behold " 

In me thou see'st " 

In me thou see'st " 

shall carry me away " 

the better part of me " 

To make me tongue-tied " 

■will hold me up afloat " 

in me each part " 

yield me but a common grave " 

Me for my dumb thoughts " 

that struck me dead " 

gift in me is wanting " 

Or me, to whom thou gavest it " 

disposed to set me light " 

thou in losing me " 
Doing the vantage, double-vantage 

me " 

forsake me for some fault " 

disgrace me half so ill " 

hate me when thou wilt " 

make me bow " 
If thou wilt leave me, do not leave 

me last " 

than high birth to me " 

and me most wretched make " 

state to me belongs " 

canst not vex me " 

still seem love to me " 

thy looks with me " 

issue seem'd to me " 
make me any summer's story tell " 

O, blame me not " 

and doing me disgrace " 
To me, fair friend, you never can 

be old " 

and Death to me subscribes " 

Then give me welcome " 

Pity me then " 

Pity me then, dear friend " 

is enough to cure me " 

who calls me well or ill " 

None else to me " 

governs me to go about " 

Let me not to the marriage " 

and upon me proved " 

Accuse me thus " 

do tie me day by day " 
transport me farthest from your 

sight " 

Bring the within the level " 

But shoot not at me " 
you were once unkind befriends 

me now " 

soon to you, as you to me " 

and yours must ransom me " 
to give them from me was I bold " 

forgetfulness in me " 

To me are nothing novel " 

Were't aught to me " 

let me be obsequious " 

render, only me for thee " 

me thy lips to kiss " 



72 


2 


72 


3 


72 


4 


72 


6 


72 


10 


72 


12 


73 


1 


73 


5 


73 


9 


74 


2 


74 


8 


80 


4 


80 


9 


81 


4 


81 


7 


85 


14 


86 


6 


87 


7 


87 


10 


88 


1 


88 


8 


88 


12 


89 


1 


89 


5 


90 


1 


90 


3 


90 


9 


91 


9 


91 


14 


92 


7 


92 


9 


93 


3 


93 


4 


97 


9 


98 


7 


103 


5 


103 


8 


104 


1 


107 


10 


110 


13 


111 


8 


111 


13 


111 


14 


112 


3 


112 


7 


113 


2 


116 


1 


116 


13 


117 


1 


117 


4 


117 


8 


117 


11 


117 


12 


120 


1 


120 


11 


120 


14 


122 


11 


122 


14 


123 


3 


125 


1 


125 


9 


125 


12 


128 


14 



Me — and they, as pitying me Son 132 1 

torments me with disdain " 132 2 

To mourn for me " 132 11 

it gives my friend and me " 133 2 

to torture me alone " 133 3 

Me from myself " 133 5 

Whoe'er keeps me " 133 11 

and all that is in me " 133 14 

surety-like to write for me " 134 7 

hast both him and me " 134 13 

and me in that one ' Will " 135 14 

let me pass untold " 136 9 

For nothing hold me " 136 11 

That nothing me, a something " 136 12 

And then thou lovest me " 136 14 

think me some untutor'd youth " 138 3 

she thinks me young " 138 5 

witli her and she with me " 138 13 

0, call not me to justify " 139 1 

Wound me not " 139 3 

and slay me not by art " 139 4 

tell me thou lovest elsewhere " 139 5 

Let me excuse thee " 139 9 

Kill me outright with looks " 139 14 

sorrow lend me words " 140 3 

yet, love, to tell me so . " 140 6 

she that makes me sin " 141 14 

turn back to me " 143 11 

kiss me, be kind " 143 12 

two spirits do suggest me still " 144 2 

To win me soon to hell " 144 5 

But being both from me " 144 11 

To me that languish'd " 145 3 

Hath left me " 147 7 

O me, what eyes hath love " 148 1 

thou keep'st me blind " 148 13 

Nay, if thou lour'st on me " 149 7 

make me give the lie " 150 3 

how to make me love thee " 150 9 

raised love in me " 150 13 

For, thou betraying me " 151 5 

to me love swearing " 152 2 

though in me you behold L C 71 

over me hath power " .... 74 

But woe is me " 78 

for me many bulwarks builded " 152 

Till thus he 'gan besiege me " 177 

less of shame in me remains " 188 

By how much of me " 189 

what tributes wounded fancies 

sent me " 197 

their passions likewise lent me " 199 

Nature hath charged me " 220 

Since I their altar, you enpatron me " 224 

What me your minister " 229 

was sent me from a nun " 2.32 

O, pardon me, in that my boast " 246 

which brought me to her eye " 247 

O, hear me tell " 253 

that to me belong " 254 

and you o'er me being strong " 257 

as he to me appears " 299 

His poison'd me, and mine did 

him restore " 301 

Ay me! I fell " 321 

think me some untutor'd youth P P 1 3 
thinking that she thinks me young "15 

and love with me " 1 13 

two spirits do suggest me still "22 



ME 



185 



MESSENGER 



Mc — To win me soon to hell P P 2 5 

For being both to me " 2 11 

cures all disgrace in me "38 

If by n^ broke " 3 13 

If love make me forsworn "51 

These thoughts, to me like oaks " . 5 4 

Which is to me some praise " 5 10 

many tales to please me "79 

'twixt thee and me "83 
Spenser to me, whose deep conceit "87 

thou left'st me nothing " 10 8 

yet thou left'st me more " 10 9 

thou didst bequeath to me " 10 12 

the warlike god embraced me " 11 5 

the warlike god unlaced me " 11 7 

To kiss and clip me " 11 14 

And daff 'd me to a cabin " 14 3 

to make me wander thither " 14 10 

and bade me come to-morrow " 15 12 

To spite me now " 15 15 

Yet not for me " 15 16 

Love hath forlorn me " 18 21 

to round me on th' ear " 19 51 

Ijive with me and be my love " 20 1 

Then live with me " 20 16 

pleasures might me move " 20 19 

Made me think upon " 21 18 

None alive will pity me " 21 28 

Head — As he roots the mead VA 636 

As winter meads when sun R L 1218 

Meadow — the meadows green Son 33 3 

Meagre — ugly, meagre, lean V A 931 

Mean — know not what we mean " 126 

what dost thou mean " 933 

means to immure herself " 1194 

if thou mean to chide R L 484 

do I mean to place him " 517 

I mean to bear thee " 670 

What means the world Son 148 6 

Meaner — that .... men should vaunt " 41 

Meaning — His meaning struck her V A 462 

Could pick no meaning R L 100 

would not take her meaning P P 11 12 
Means — Some happy mean to end a 

hapless life R L 1045 

These means, as frets " 1140 

Pausing for means " 1365 

That he finds means " 1561 

With means more blessed Son 16 4 

Than public means " 111 4 

Meant— and meant thereby " 11 13 
Measure — Measure my strangeness 

with my unripe years VA 524 

to tread the measures " 1148 

they measure by thy deeds Son 69 10 

are not my measure " 91 7 

Measured — Thus far the miles are. ... " 50 4 

Mediator — be you mediators R L 1020 

Medicine — And brought to medicine Son 118 11 
Meditation — O, fearful meditation " 65 9 

Meed — ^this favour, for thy meed V A 15 

is the meed proposed R L 132 

Meek — all recreant, poor, and meek " 710 

Meet — shall we meet to-morrow VA 585 

here she meets another " 917 

to meet the eastern light R L 773 

ne'er meet with Opportunity " 903 

they with winter meet Son 5 13 

■with base infection meet " 94 11 



Meeting— the clouds contend VA 820 

till meeting greater ranks R L 1441 

All our merry meetings P P 18 46 

Mcetness— found a kind of meetness Son 118 7 

Melancholy— like a malcontent F. 4 313 

oppress'd with melancholy Son 45 8 

Mellow— The mellow plum doth fall VA 527 

Melodious— Melodious discord, heav- 
enly tune " 431 

the sweet melodious sounds P P 8 9 

Melodious birds sing madrigals " 20 8 

Melody— with their sweet melody R L 1108 

Melt— or seem to melt VA 144 

melt with the midday sun " 750 

Which her cheek melts " 982 

melt at mine eyes' red fire " 1073 

Melt at my tears RL 594 

when sun doth melt " 1218 

Melted— Was melted like a vapour V A 1166 

Melting— to his melting buttock lent " 315 

morning's silver-melting dew R L 24 

moistened like a melting eye " 1227 

All melting; though our drops L C 300 

Memorial— Which for memoi;ial still Son 74 4 

MenifryfT-might bear his memory "14 
their brave state out of memory " 15 8 
living record of your memory " 55 8 

shall never cut from memory " 63 11 

will give thee memory " 77 6 

what thy memory cannot contain " 77 9 
From hence your memory " 81 3 

with lasting memory " 122 2 

Mend— To mend the hurt VA 478 

the thought of hearts can mend Son 69 2 
thou dost but mend the style " 78 11 

sinful then, striving to mend " 103 9 

Mended — Whether we are mended " 59 11 

Merchandized — That love is mer- 
chandized whose rich esteeming " 102 3 

Merchant — The merchant fears R L 836 

merchant of this loss " 1660 

Merciful— It shall be merciful V A 1155 

Merciless— the and pitchy night " 821 

tries a merciless conclusion R L 1160 

Mercy— Lies at the mercy " 364 

in her heart did mercy come Son 145 5 

Merely — characters and words mere- 
ly but art L C 174 

merely with the garment " ..... 316 

Merit— Thy merit hath my duty Son 26 2 
What merit lived in me " 72 2 

And place my merit " 88 2 

or thy dear merit " 108 4 

it merits not reproving " 142 4 

What merit do I in myself respect " 149 9 
Where thy desert may merit P P 19 27 

Meritorious — a fair design R L 1692 

Mermaid — Thy mermaid's voice V A 429 

like the wanton mermaid's songs " 777 

As if some mermaid R L 1411 

Merry — she hears a merry horn V A 1025 

And merry fools R L 989 

slain in merry company " 1110 

brooks not merry guests " 1125 

All my merry jigs PP 18 9 

All our merry meetings " 18 46 

In the merry month of May " 21 2 

Messenger — the mindful messenger 

comeback RL 1583 



MESSENGER 



186 



MIND 



Messenger— By those swift Son 45 10 

Met— When as I met the boar VA 999 

Met far from home M L 1596 

Metal— With twisted metal L C 205 

Methiiiks— And yet methinks Son 14 2 
Methinks no face so gracious " 62 5 
which methinks still doth stand " 104 11 
That all the world besides me- 
thinks are dead " 112 14 
methinks thou stay'st too long PP 12 12 
Method— To new-found methods Son 76 4 
Metre— And stretched metre " 17 12 

Mettle— That horse his mettle L C 107 

Mickle — more mickle was the pain P P 16 9 

Mid-day — tired in the mid-day heat V A 177 

melts with the mid-day sun " ,.... 750 
Middle — strong youth in his middle 

age Son 7 6 

Midnight— dead of dark midnight R L 1625 

Midst — But in the midst " 344 

And midst the' sentence " 566 

Yet in the midst of all P P 7 11 

Might— He might be buried VA 244 

the feast might ever last " 447 

kings might be espoused P L 20 

Might have excuse to work " 235 

might compass his fair fair " 346 

might have reposed still " 382 

Till they might open " 399 

and shame that might ensue " 1263 

whicli the world might bear her " 1321 

might become them better " 1323 

There might you see " 1380 

That one might see " 1386 

You might behold " 1388 

might one behold " 1395 

Their pleading might you see " 1401 

might be done to me " 1023 

might plead for justice there " 1649 

when I might charm thee so " 1681 

beauty's rose might never die Son 1 2 

might bear his memory "14 

in honour might uphold " 13 10 

it might unused stay " 48 3 

That I might see " 59 9 

might be better used " 82 13 

being extant, well might show " S3 6 

might the stern wolf betray " 96 9 

might I from myself depart " 109 3 

Might I not then say " 115 10 

Then might I not say so " 115 13 

might have remember'd " 120 9 

It might for Fortune's bastard " 124 2 

That she might think me " 138 3 

might dart their injuries " 139 12 

If I might teach thee " 140 5 

might speak ill of thee " 140 10 

might think sometime it saw L C 10 

I might as yet have been " 75 

That she might think me P P 1 3 

as well as well might be " 16 2 

Air, would I might triumph so " 17 10 

pleasures might me move " 20 19 

Might— noT! brag not of thy might VA 113 

sought with all my might R L 488 

of mine own love's might Son 23 8 

sharpen'd in his former might " 56 4 

unless this miracle have might " 65 13 

spends all his might " 80 3 



Might — worst of fortune's might Son 90 12 

gives thee all thy might " 100 2 

built up with newer might " 123 2 

with cunning, when thy might '* 139 7 

hast thou this powerful might " 150 1 

her absence valiant, not her might L C 245 

Mightier — The mightier man, the 

mightier is the thing R L 1004 

do not you a mightier way Son 16 1 

Mightily— but mightily he noted R L 414 

Mightst — Then mightst thou pause V A 137 

thou mightst my seat forbear Son 41 9 

mightst thou lead away " 96 11 

Mighty- Thyself art mighty R L 583 

forgot in mighty Rome " 1644 

How mighty then you are L C 253 

Milch— Like a milch doe ' VA 875 

Mild — raging-mad and silly-mild " 1151 

And let mild women R L 979 

not infant sorrows, bear them mild " 1096 

By this, mild patience " 1268 

But the mild glance " 1399 

So mild that Patience " 1505 

this mild image drew " 1520 

so weary and so mild " 1542 

Mild as a dove P P 7 2 

Mildness— to him lose their .... R L 979 

Mile — To leap large lengths of miles Son 44 10 

Thus far the miles are measured " 50 4 

Milk— Like milk and blood VA 902 

Milk-white— than her dove P P 9 3 

Million — That millions of strange 

shadows on you tend Son 53 2 

Million'd — Time, whose million'd 

accidents " 115 5 

Mind— so hard a mind V A 203 

if she knew bis mind " 308 

with disturbed mind " 340 

For all my mind " 383 

weak and silly mind " 1016 

doth men's minds confound " 1048 

troubled minds that wake R L 126 

And in his inward mind " 185 

burthen of a guilty mind " 735 

to close so pure a mind " 761 

let beasts bear gentle minds " 1148 

For men have marble, women 

waxen, minds " 1240 

At last she calls to mind " 1366 

to mock the mind " 1414 

save to the eye of mind " 1426 

not a mind so ill " 1530 

came in her mind the while " 1536 

should bear a wicked mind " 1540 

and spotless is my mind " 1656 

May my pure mind " 1704 

her mind untainted clears " 1710 

from weak minds proceeds " 1825 

her husband's shape in mind Son 9 8 

that I may change my mind " 10 9 

To work my mind " 27 4 

by night my mind " 27 13 

doth put this in my mind " 50 13 

Since mind at first " 59 8 

the beauty of thy mind " 69 9 

thy mind's imprint will bear " 77 3 

new acquaintance of thy mind " 77 12 

vex me with inconstant mind " 92 9 

mine eye is in my mind " 113 1 



MIND 



187 



MINISTER 



lEinrl — hath the mind no part Smi 113 7 

My most true mind. " 113 14 

Or whether doth my mind " 114 1 

And my great mind " 114 10 

Divert strong minds " 115 8 

the marriage of true minds " 116 1 

been with unknown minds " 117 5 

for now I know thy mind " 149 13 

That in my mind " 150 8 

The mind and sight L C 28 

did enchant the mind " 89' 

and in it put their mind " 135 

none of the mind " 184 

Minded — If all were minded so Son 11 7 

Mindful — But now the mindful mes- 
senger come back R L 1583 

Mine — Though mine be not so fair VA 116 

The kiss shall be thine own as 

well as mine " 117 

Look in mine eyeballs " 119 

Mine eyes are grey " 140 

Adonis' heart hath made mine hard " 378 

this poor heart of mine " 502 

And these mine eyes " 503 

mine eyes to watch " 584 

lurk in mine eye " 644 

whispers in mine ear " 659 

presenteth to mine eye " 661 

Mine eyes forego their light R L 228 

never countermand mine eye " 276 

thine eyes betray thee unto mine " ..:.. 483 

to embrace mine infamy " 504 

see thy state and pity mine " 644 

hang their heads with mine " 793 

from this attaint of mine " 825 

cavil with mine infamy " 1025 

mine eyes, like sluices " 1076 

to alfright mine eye " 1138 

mine honour is new-born " 1190 

mine honour be the knife's " 1201 

the slander of mine ill " 1207 

mine own would do me good " 1274 

Mine enemy was strong " 1646 

to make mine own excuse " 1653 

Thine, mine, his own " 1684 

to 'venge this wrong of mine " 1691 

That life was mine " 1752 

'She's mine.' '0, mine she is " 1795 

for she was only mine " 1798 

'tis mine that she hath kill'd " 1803 

'This fair child of mine Son 2 10 

Mine be thy love " 20 14 

thy heart when mine is slain " 22 13 

in mine own love's strength " 23 7 

of mine own love's might " 23 8 

Mine eye hath play'd " 24 1 

Mine eyes have drawn " 24 10 

which wit so poor as mine " 26 5 

love stol'n from mine eye " 31 6 

he was but one hour mine " 33 11 
As thou being mine, mine is the 

good report " 36 14 

The pain be mine " 38 14 
What can mine own praise to mine 

own self bring " 39 3 

what is't but mine own " 39 4 

All mine was thine " 40 4 

then do mine eyes best see " 43 1 

mine eyes be' blessed made " 43 9 



Mine— Mine eye and heart are at a 

mortal war Son 46 1 
Mine eye my heart thy picture's 

sight " 46 3 

My heart mine eye the freedom " 46 4 

mine eye's due is thine " 46 13 

Betwixt mine eye and heart " 47 1 

When that mine eye " 47 3 

mine eye is my heart's guest " 47 7 

dearest and mine only care " 48 7 

knowledge of mine own desert " 49 10 

that keeps mine eye awake " 61 10 

Mine own true love " 61 11 

possesseth all mine eye " 62 1 

so gracious is as mine " 62 5 

mine own worth do deiine " 62 7 

Mine own self-love " 62 11 

than mine own desert " 72 6 

matter ; that enfeebled mine " 86 14 

With mine own weakness " 88 5 

thou art assured mine " 92 2 
As thou being mine, mine is thy 

good report " 96 14 

and mine eye may be deceived " 104 12 

Not mine own fears " 107 1 

thou mine, I thine " 108 7 

Gored mine own thoughts " 110 3 

Mine appetite I never more " 110 10 

mine eye is in my mind " 113 1 

thus maketh mine untrue " 113 14 

mine eye saith true " 114 3 

Mine eye well knows " 114 11 

That mine eye loves it " 114 14 

How have mine eyes " 119 7 

Mine ransoms yours, and yours " 120 14 

that mine ear confounds " 128 4 
Myself I'll forfeit, so that other 

mine " 134 3 

One will of mine " 135 12 

dost thou to mine eyes " 137 1 

Or mine eyes seeing this " 137 11 

have been mine enemies " 189 10 

love thee with mine eyes " 141 1 

Nor are mine ears " 141 5 

O, but with mine compare " 142 3 

of love as oft as mine " 142 7 
thine eyes woo as mine importune 

thee " 142 10 

I mine honour shielded L C 151 

that mine eyes have seen " 190 

but mine own was free " 195 

And mine I pour " 256 

hearts that do on mine depend " 274 

that you make 'gainst mine " 277 

and mine did him restore ■ " 301 

then it is no fault of mine P P 3 12 

Her lips to mine "77 

Lord, how mine eyes " 15 1 

the office of mine eyes " 15 4 

think upon mine own " 21 18 

Either was the other's mine P T 36 

Mingle— To mingle beauty V A- 735 

Mingled — with others being .... " 691 

being mingled both together " 902 

red nor pale, but mingled so R L 1510 

Mingling — Mingling my talk with 

tears " 797 

Minion — thou .... of her pleasure Son 126 9 

Minister — What me your minister L C 229 



MINORITY 



188 



MOIST 



Minority — Proving from world's mi- 
nority tlieir riglit M L 67 

Minstrel — Feast-finding minstrels " 817 

Minute — But in one minute's fight VA 746 

one minute in an hour " 1187 

Who buys a minute's mirth a L 213 

as minutes fill up hours " 297 

Till every minute pays " 329 

One poor retiring minute " 962 

to brief minutes tell Son 14 5 

So do our minutes " 60 2 

thy precious minutes waste " 77 2 

and wretched minutes kill " 126 8 

But now are minutes added P P 15 14 

each minute seems a moon " 15 15 

Miracle — unless this .... have might <&» 65 13 

Mire — his coal-black wings in mire R L 1009 

Mirror — now that fair fresh mirror " 1760 

Mirth — Who buys a minute's mirth " 213 

For mirth doth search " 1109 

Miscall'd — truth .... simplicity Son 66 11 

Mischance — Of mad mischances V A 738 

With some mischance R L 968 

bechance him pitiful mischances " 976 

Mischief— A mischief worse V A 764 

Why work'st thou mischief R L 960 

Misdeed — Then kings' misdeeds " 609 

That from their own misdeeds " 637 

Miser — As 'twixt a miser and his 

wealth Son 75 4 

Misery — For misery is trodden on V A 707 

and much misery " 738 

Is no friend in misery P P 21 32 

Misfortune — Of hard misfortune R L 1713 

Misgoverning — dishonour, shame, 

misgoverning " 654 

Mishap — lauguisheth in her mishaps FJ. 603 

Misplaced — honour shamefully .... Son 66 5 

Misprision — upon growing " 87 11 

Misled — is his heart misled R L 369 

Miss — blames her miss V A 53 

Miss'd — being clouded presently is 

miss'd R L 1007 

thy record never can be miss'd Son 122 8 
Mis -sliapen — Mis-shapen Time, 

copesmate of ugly Night R L 925 

Missing — she in him finds missing V A 605 

Mistalie — hounds .... their smell " 686 

Mistakes that aim, and cleaves " 942 

oft the eye mistakes " 1068 

though I mistake my view Son 148 11 

Mistaliing — Or me, to whom thou 

gavest it, else mistaking " 87 10 

Mistook — mistook the matter so P'/y 1826 

Mist— In his dim mist " 548 

And wipe the dim mist " 643 

Muster thy mists to meet " 773 

Mistress — Their mistress, mounted, 

through the empty skies V A 1191 

our mistress' ornaments R L 322 

I am the mistress of my fate " 1069 

to her mistress hies " 1215 

Her mistress she doth give " 1219 

set in her mistress' sky " 1230 

the master-mistress of my passion /Sbra 20 2 
sovereign mistress over wrack " 126 5 

Therefore my mistress' eyes " 127 9 

My mistress' eyes " 1-30 1 

that from my mistress reeks " 130 8 



Mistress — My mistress, when she 

walks Son 130 12 

But at my mistress' eye " 153 9 

got new fire, my mistress' eyes " 153 14 

but I, my mistress' thrall " 154 12 
Sweetly supposed them mistress 

of his heart ^ L C 142 

Lest that my mistress hear P P 19 50 

Mistrust — where it should most . ...V A 1154 

and full of fond mistrust R L 284 

duty kindled her mistrust " 1352 

itself could not mistrust " 1516 

Mistrustful — in some .... wood V A 826 

Misty — like misty vapours " 184 

eye of heaven is out, and misty 

night R L 356 

And let thy misty vapours " 782 

Misuse — are oaths but to misuse thee (Sora 152 7 

Mixed — such lamps together mix'd V A 489 

eloquence with sighs is mixed R L 563 

Which is not mix'd Son 125 11 

and solace mix'd with sorrow PP 15 11 

Moan — repetition of her moans V A 831 

moved with woman's moans R L 587 

monuments of lasting moans " 798 

To make him moan ; but pity not 

his moans " 977 

Make her moans mad " 1108 

moan tired moan " 1363 

of fore-bemoaned moan Son 30 11 

time's leisure with my moan " 44 12 

should look into your moan " 71 13 

upon mj'self with present moan " 149 8 

smiled or made some moan L C 217 

the cause of all my moan P P 18 51 

Every thing did banish moan " 21 7 

Moan — To make him moau R L 977 

And moan the expense Son 30 8 
Mock — To mock the subtle in them- 
selves beguiled R L 957 

fools to mock at him resort " 989 

Mock with thy tickling beams " 1090 

higher seem'd, to mock " 1414 

shadows like to thee do mock my 

sight Son 61 4 

And mock you with me " 71 14 

mock their own presage " 107 6 

Mocking — You mocking birds R L 1121 

Modern — How far a modern quill Son 83 7 

Modest — and modest pride VA 278 

Make modest Dian " 725 

With modest Lucrece R L 123 

love's modest snow-white weed " 196 

O modest wantons " 401 

Her modest eloquence with sighs 

is mixed " 563 

That ever modest eyes " 683 

Modestly — She modestly prepares " 1607 

Modesty — wanton modesty " 401 

true mark of modesty " 1220 

terror and dear modesty L C 202 

cold modesty, hot wrath " 293 

Moe — public plague of many moe R L 1479 

In me moe woes " 1615 

Found yet moe letters L C 47 

And labouring in moe pleasures " 139 

Moiety — The clear eye'^ moiety Son 46 12 

Moist — My smooth moist hand V A 143 

From his moist cabinet " 854 



MOISTEN'D 



189 



MORE 



MoisteuM — . . . . like a melting eye R L 

Moisture — calls it heavenly ... . VA 

The heavenly moisture " 

O, that infected moisture of his eye X C 

Moment — Which in a moment R L 

Even in the moment " 

but a little moment Son 15 

Upon the moment L C 

Momentary — This momentary joy R L 

Mouari'Ii — But happy monarchs " 

Drink up the monarch's plague Son 11-4 

Or monarch's hand L C 

Monarchy— commanding in his mon- 
archy " 

'Moiigst — 'Mongst our mourners P T 

Monster— To make of monsters Son 114 
Month— joy breeds months of pain R L 

whose month was ever May P P 17 

In the merry month of May " 21 

Monument — Where, like a virtuous 

monument, she lies R L 

Poor wasting monuments " 

To fill with worm-holes stately 
monuments " 

nor the gilded monuments Son 55 

Your monument shall be " 81 

Shalt find thy monument " 107 
Mood — his .... with nought agrees jB L 

it small avails my mood " 

Is writ in moods Son 93 

and the encrimson'd mood L C 

Moody — And moody Pluto winks R L 

this moody heaviness " 

Moon — Shone like the moon V A 

that hides the silver moon R L 

The moon being clouded " 

With sun and moon Son 21 

stain both moon and sun " 35 

The mortal moon hath her eclipse 
endured •' 107 

each minute seems a moon P P 15 
Moralize — thou hear'st me moralize VA 

Nor could she moralize R L 

More — more lovely than a man V A 

More white and red " 

What follows more she murders 
with a kiss 

Which bred more beauty 

with a more delight 

More thirst for drink 

Fie, no more of love 

Naj', more than flint 

her woes the more increasing 

the happy season once more fits 

Burnetii more hotly, swelleth with 
more rage 

Once more the engine 

Once more the ruby-colour'd 

no more had seen 

now no more resisteth 

no more detain him 

And more than so ' 

hear a little more 

more gold begets 

more moving than your own 

More I could tell, but more I dare 
not say 

him seen no more 

bids them fear no more 



1227 

64 

542 

323 

250 

868 

2 

248 

690 

611 

2 

41 

196 
20 
5 

690 
2 
2 

391 

798 

946 

1 

9 

13 

1095 

1273 

8 

201 

553 

1602 

492 

371 

1007 

6 

3 

5 
15 
712 
104 
9 
10 

54 

70 

78 

92 

185 

200 

254 

327 

332 
367 
451 
504 
563 
577 
661 
709 
768 
776 

805 
819 
899 



More — Her more than haste 
once more leap her eyes 
That makes more gashes 
more am I accurst 
now no more reflect 
more sweet-smelling sire 
espoused to more fame 
he pineth still for more 
More than his eyes 
And so, by hoping more 
Or gaining more 
beholds as more divine 
Paying more slavish tribute 
To add a more rejoicing 
birds more cause to sing 
latch, and with no more 
With more than admiration 
with more dreadful sights 
more rage and lesser pity 
her oratory adds more grace 
' No more,' quoth he 
To make more vent 
doth make the wound ache more 
No more than wax 
The more to blame 
For more it is 
When more is felt 
moves more than hear them told 
with more than haste 
Speed more than speed 
Promise more speed 
make him more amazed 
The more she saw the blood 
The more she thought 
More feeling-painful 
But more than he 
That I no more can see 
to make it more 
How much more praise 
she gave thee more 
Thou shouldst print more 
With means more blessed 
more lovely and more temperate 
An eye more bright 
Let them say more 
More than that tongue that more 

hath more express'd 
more rich in hope 
once more re-survey 
No more be grieved 
more than thy sins are 
or all, or more 
ten times more in worth 
What hast thou then more than 

thou hadst before 
thou hadst this more 
touches me more nearly 
More sharp to me 
O, how much more 
shall shine more bright 
more blest may be 
thrice more wish'd, more rare 
To do more for me 
And hang more praise 
live no more to shame 
makes thy love more strong 
There lives more life 
Which can say more 
of praise add something more 



VA 


909 




1050 




1066 




1120 




1130 




1178 


RL 


20 




98 




105 




137 




138 




291 




299 




332 




333 




339 




418 




462 




468 




564 




667 




1040 




1116 




1245 




1278 




1286 




1288 




1324 




1332 




1336 




1349 


" 


1356 




1357 




1358 


" 


1679 




1718 




1764 




1789 


Son 2 


9 


" 11 


11 


" 11 


14 


" 16 


4 


" 18 


2 


" 20 


5 


" 21 


13 


" 23 


12 


" 29 


5 


" 32 


3 


« 35 


1 


" 35 


8 


" 37 


6 


" 38 


9 


" 40 


2 


" 40 


4 


" 42 


4 


" 50 


12 


" 54 


1 


" 55 


3 


" 56 


12 


" 56 


14 


" 72 


6 


" 72 


7 


" 72 


12 


" 73 


13 


" 83 


13 


" 84 


1 


" 85 


10 



MORE 



190 



MOTHER 



More — no more shall dwell 
Of more delight than hawks 
loved of more and less 
More flowers I noted 
more weak in seeming 
is of more worth 
If I no more can write 
And more, much more 
I never more will grind 
Incapable of more 
our appetites more keen 
more strong, far greater 
more than I have spent 
that receive thee more 
Made more or less 
Which prove more short 
Lose all, and more 
more blest than living lips 
Coral is far more red 
is there more delight 
a far more pleasing sound 
More than enough 
make thy large ' AVill ' more 
Is more than my o'er-press'd de- 
fence can bide 
without be rich no more 
there's no more dying then 
make me love thee more 
The more I hear and see 
More worthy I to be 
more perjured I 
more black and damned here 
by that cost more dear 
to make our wits more keen 
with more than love's good will 
he saw more wounds than one 
And yet thou left'st me more 
more mickle was the pain 
More in women than in men 
Use his company no more 

Morn — of the weeping morn 
From morn till night 
Like a red morn 
He cheers the morn 
or morn or weary even 
To wake the morn 
one early morn did shine 
when his youthful morn 
dried up the dewy morn 
Fair was the morn 
Youth like summer morn 

Morning — And wakes the morning 
Musing the morning 
morning's silver-melting dew 
looks for the morning light 
ravish the morning air 
that tune their morning's joy 
Full many a glorious morning 
the morning sun of heaven 
watch ; the morning rise 

Mortal — on this mortal round 
Like to a mortal butcher 
for thy mortal vigour 
of all mortal things 
overthrow of mortal kind 
Where mortal stars, as bright 
had closed up mortal eyes 
at the mercy of his mortal sting 
And by their mortal fault 



Son 


89 


10 


" 


91 


11 


" 


96 


3 


" 


99 


14 


" 


102 


1 


" 


103 


3 


" 


103 


5 


" 


103 


13 


" 


110 


10 


" 


113 


13 


" 


118 


1 


" 


119 


12 


" 


119 


14 


" 


122 


12 


" 


123 


12 


" 


125 


4 


" 


125 


6 


" 


128 


12 


" 


130 


2 


" 


130 


7 


" 


130 


10 


" 


135 


3 


" 


135 


12 


« 


139 


8 


" 


146 


12 


" 


146 


14 


" 


150 


9 


" 


150 


10 


" 


150 


14 


" 


152 


13 


LC 




54 
96 
161 


PP 


9 


7 


" 


9 


13 


" 


10 


9 


" 


16 


9 


" 


18 


18 


" 


21 


50 


VA 




2 
154 
453 
484 
495 


RL 




942 


Son 


33 


9 


" 


63 


4 


PP 


6 


1 


" 


9 


1 


" 


12 


3 


VA 




855 
866 


RL 




24 
745 
778 
1107 


Son 


33 


1 


" 


132 


5 


PP 


15 


2 


VA 




368 
618 
953 
996 
1018 


RL 




13 
163 
364 
724 



Mortal — Yet mortal looks adore Son 7 7 
are at a mortal war " 46 1 

eternal slave to mortal rage " 64 4 

Above a mortal pitch " 86 6 

The mortal moon " 107 5 

Turning mortal for thy love P P 17 18 

Mortality — death's dim look in life's 

mortality R L 403 

sad mortality o'er-sways their 
power Son 65 2 

Mortstage — am mortgaged to thy will " 134 2 

Morrow — Venus salutes him with 

this fair good-morrow VA 859 

when lo, the blushing morrow RL 1082 

give demure good-morrow " 1219 

and then she longs for morrow " 1571 

a windy night, a rainy morrow Son 90 7 

Most — when most his choice VA 570 

shall it make most weak " 1145 

it should most mistrust " 1154 

And most deceiving when it seems 

most just " 1156 

it shows most toward " 1157 

When most unseen, then most 

doth tyrannize R L 676 

Great grief grieves most " 1117 

manners most expressly told " 1397 

Who should weep most " 1792 

thou none lovest is most evident Son 10 4 
Sets you most rich " 15 10 

with your most high deserts " 17 2 

one most heinous crime " 19 8 

in that I honour most " 25 4 

With what I most enjoy " 29 8 

When most I wink " 43 1 

Most worthy comfort, now my 

greatest grief " 48 6 

Yet be most proud " 78 9 

Where breath most breathes " 81 14 

shall be most my glory " 83 10 

Who is it that says most " 84 1 

And to the most of praise ' " 85 10 

and me most wretched make " 91 14 

they most do show " 94 2 

of this most balmy time "107 9 

sold cheap what is most dear "110 3 

Most true it is " 110 5 

and most most loving breast " 110 14 

The most sweet favour " 113 10 

My most true mind " 113 14 

most kingly drinks it up " 114 10 

My most full flame " 115 4 

When most impeach'd " 125 14 

and most precious jewel " 131 4 

I am perjured most " 152 6 

O most potential love L C 264 

When he most burn'd " 314 

Mot — may read the mot afar R L 830 

Mote — each little mote will peep " 1251 

Mother— 0, had thy mother VA 203 

that suck'd an earthly mother " 863 

mother of dread and fear RL 117 

nor mothers' groans respecting " 431 

That mother tries a merciless 

conclusion " 1160 

many Trojan mothers sharing joy " 1431 

unbless some mother So7i 3 4 

Thou art thy mother's glass "39 

sire and child and happy mother " 8 11 



MOTHER 



191 



MURDEROUS 



Mother — As any mother's child Son 21 11 

And play the mother's part " 143 12 

Motion— with their continual .... JR L 591 

The heavy motion " 1326 

with swift motion slide Son 45 4 

no motion shall I know " 51 S 

Hath motion, and mine eye " 104 12 

wood whose motion sounds " 128 2 

the motion of thine eyes " 149 12 

all that borrow'd motion L C 327 

Motire — the grounds and motives of 

her woe " 63 

Motley — a motley to the view Son 110 2 

Moulil — stealing moulds from heaven F^ 7.30 

Mount — although he mount her " 598 

mounts up on high " 854 

if he mount he dies It L 508 

Mountain — on mountain or in dale V A 232 

As mountain snow melts " 750 

the aspii'ing mountains R L 548 

The mountain or the sea Son 113 11 
And all the craggy mountains 

yields PP 20 4 

Mountain-spring — As from a . . . . R L 1077 

Mountain-top — Flatter the moun- 
tain-tops Son 33 2 

Mounted — Her champion mounted V A 596 

mounted, through tlie empty skies " 1191 

though mounted on the wind Son 51 7 

Mourn — to mourn some newer way R L 1365 

No longer mourn for me Son 71 1 

Yet so they mourn " 127 13 

To mourn for me " 132 11 

In black mourn I P P IS 19 

Mourner — mourner, black and grim V A 920 

let no mourner say R L 1797 

and they mourners seem Son 127 10 

and loving mourners be " 132 3 

'Mongst our mourners P T 20 

Mourn'st — thou mourn'st in vain P P 21 19 

Mournful — her .... hymns did hush Son 102 10 

Mourning — clad in mourning black P L 1585 

the mourning and congealed face " 1744 

As those two mourning eyes Son 132 9 

mourning doth thee grace " 132 11 

Mouse — the weak mouse pantetJh RL 555 

Mouth— Open'd their mouths VA 248 

Enfranchising his mouth " 396 

that sweet coral mouth " 542 

they spend their mouths " 695 

"Whose frothy mouth " 901 

even in the mouths of men Son 81 14 

Mouthed — Another flap-mouth'd 

mourner VA 920 

Of mouthed graves Son 77 6 

Move — thy outward parts would .... VA 435 

This moves in him more rage R L 468 

moves more than hear them told " 1324 

that move thy pity " 1553 

my thoughts canst move Son 47 11 

these pleasures may thee move P P 20 15 

pleasures might me move " 20 19 

Moved— Being moved, he strikes VA 623 

moved with woman's moans R L 587 

Be moved with my tears " 588 

Yet if men moved him L C 101 

Mover — fairest mover V A 368 

Moving— more moving than your own " 776 

star that guides my moving Son 26 9 



Moving — Who, moving others Son 94 3 

Doth cite each moving sense P P 15 3 

Mow — but for his scythe to mow Son 60 12 

Much— 'Tis much to borrow V A 411 

be still as much " 442 

with too much handUng " 560 

as much as may be " 608 

With much ado " 694 

mischances and much misery " 738 

is so much o'erworn " 866 

how much a fool was I " 1015 

too much wonder of his eye R L 95 

That, cloy'd with much, he " 98 

Those that much covet " 134 

In having much " 151 

She, much amazed " 446 

With too much labour drowns " 1099 

and too much talk affords " 1106 

Much like a press of people " 1301 

much imaginary work was there " 1422 

To give her so much grief " ....: 1463 

that so much guile " 1534 

How much more praise Son 2 9 

for thou art much too fair " 6 13 
Much liker than your painted 

counterfeit " 16 8 

replete with too much rage " 23 3 

with tliy much clearer light " 43 7 

so much of earth and water " 44 11 

O, how much more " 54 1 

though much, is not so great " 61 9 

so much as my poor name " 71 11 

and much enrich thy book " 77 14 

Shalt win much glory " 88 8 

Lest I too much profane " 89 11 

To make him much outlive " 101 11 
And more, much more, than in 

my verse " 103 13 

could not so much hold " 122 9 

by paying too much rent " 125 6 

with too much disdain " 140 2 

And so much less L C 188 

By how much of me " 189 

my heart so much as warmed " 191 

enough,— too much, I fear P P 19 49 

Mud — Mud not the fountain that 

gave drink to thee R L 577 

infect fair founts with venom mud " 850 

and silver fountains mud Son 35 2 

find their sepulchres in mud L C 46 

Muffled— Blind muffled bawd R L 768 

Mulberry — Would bring him mul- 
berries VA 1103 

Murder — To rate the boar for murther" 906 

WhUe lust and murder wakes R L 168 

tragedies and murders fell " 766 

rape and murder's rages " 909 

of murder and of theft " 918 

Murder — she murders with a kiss V A 54 

I murder shameful scorn R L 1189 

I'll murder straight " 1634 

Murder'd — murder'd this poor heart F.4 502 

murder'd with the view " 1031 

Murder'st^Tbou murder'st troth P L 885 

and murder'st all that are " 929 

Murderous— The murderous knife " 1735 

such murderous shame commits Son 9 14 

possess'd with murderous hate " 10 5 

Is perjur'd, murderous " 129 3 



MURMUR 



192 



MY 



Murmur — each murmur stay VA 706 

Muse — with me as with that Muse Son 21 1 

Had my friend's Muse " 32 10 

How can my Muse " 38 1 

Be thou the tenth Muse " 38 9 

If my slight Muse do please " 38 13 

invoked thee for my Muse " 78 1 

my sick Muse doth give " 79 4 

married to my Muse " 82 1 

My tongue-tied Muse " 85 1 

by all the Muses filed " 85 4 

Where art thou, Muse " 100 1 

Return, forgetful Muse " 100 5 

Else, resty Muse " 100 9 

truant Muse " 101 1 
Make answer. Muse " 101 5 
Then do thy ofllce. Muse " 101 13 
my Muse brings forth " 103 1 

Music — Ear's deei>sweet music VA 432 

Whose tongue is music now " 1077 

Music to hear, why hear'st thou 

music sadly Son 8 1 

But that wild music " 102 11 

thou my music, music play'st " 128 1 
music hath a far more pleasing 

sound " 130 10 

is music and sweet fire P P 5 12 
If music and sweet poetry agree "81 

lute, the queen of music, makes " 8 10 

That defunctive music can P T 14 

Musing' — Musing the morning VA 866 

Musit— The many musits through 

the which he goes " 683 

Must — yet her fire must burn " 94 

1 must remove " 186 

that must be cool'd " 387 

must not repel a lover " 573 

thou needs must have " 759 

truth I must confess " 1001 

lives and must not die " 1017 

like him, I must confess " 1117 

must doting Tarquin make M L 155 

himself he must forsake " 157 

Which must be lode-star " 179 

must I force to mj' desire " 182 

quoth he, 'I must deflower " 348 

But they must ope " 383 

Must sell her joy, her life " 385 

must my will abide " 486 

this night I must enjoy thee " 512 

force must work my way " 513 

thou perforce must bear " 612 

Must he in thee read lectures " 618 

must vomit his receipt " 703 

alone must sit and pine " 795 

So must my soul " 1169 

How Tarquin must be used " 1195 

And only must be wail'd " 1799 

must be tomb'd with thee Son 4 13 

among the wastes of time must go " 12 10 

And you must live " 16 14 

must you see his skill " 24 5 

an accessary needs must be " 35 13 

we two must be twain " 36 1 

yet we must not be foes " 40 14 

I must attend time's leisure " 44 12 

whereon it must expire " 73 11 

which thou must leave ere long " 73 14 

or must from you be took " 75 12 



81 


6 


89 


14 


108 


6 


112 


5 



Must — to all the world must die Son 
I must ne'er love him " 
I must each day say o'er " 
and I must strive " 
Needs must I under my transgres- 
sion bow " 120 3 
and yours must ransom me " 120 14 
my deeds must not be shown " 121 12 
though delay'd, answer'd must be " 126 11 
my sweet'st friend must be " 133 4 
in thy stores' account I one must be " 136 10 

she must herself assay L C 156 

That we must curb it " 163 

where I myself must render " 221 

must your oblations be " 223 

Must for your victory " 258 

As they must needs PP % 2 

Then must the love be great "83 

one must be refused " 16 9 

Must live alone " 18 53 

Muster — muster troops of cares R L 720 

Muster thy mists " 773 

Mustering — . ... to the quiet cabinet " 442 

Mute — or else be mute " 208 

attorney once is mute " 335 

Will not my tongue be mute " 227 

be you mute and dumb " 1123 

beauty being mute Son 83 11 

the very birds are mute " 97 12 

Mutiny — Gives false alarms, suggest- 

eth mutiny V A 651 

This mutiny each part " 1049 

this mutiny restrains R L 426 

with herself is she in mutiny " 1153 

Mutual— Till mutual overthrow VA 1018 

in each by mutual ordering Son 8 10 

But mutual render " 125 12 

In a mutual flame P T 24 

My — my captive and my slave V A 101 

Over my altars " 103 

And for my sake " 105 

Making my arms his field, his tent 

my bed " 108 

to my coy disdain " 112 

Touch but my lips " 115 

one wrinkle in my brow " 139 

My beauty as the spring " 141 

My flesh is soft and plump, my 

marrow burning " 142 

My smooth moist hand " 143 

sun doth burn my face " 186 

for thee of my hairs " 191 

quench them with my tears " 192 

dwells upon my suit " 206 

thou shalt be my deer " 231 

Graze on my lips " 233 

Then be my deer " 239 

thus my strength is tried " 280 

My heart all whole as thine, thy 

heart my wound " 370 

my body's bane would cure " 372 

'Give me my hand " 373 

' Give me my heart " 374 

My day's delight is past, my horse 

is gone " 380 

all my mind, my thought, my busy 

care " 383 

my palfrey from the mare " 384 

My love to love " ~... 412 



MY 



193 



MY 



My— 'You hurt my hand VA 421 

my unyielding heart " 423 

I had my load " 430 

my ears would love " 433 

my love to thee " 442 

in my soft lips " 511 

on my wax-red lips " 516 

buys my heart from me " 517 

Measure my strangeness with my 

unripe years " 524 

my sick heart commands " 584 

my joints did tremble " 642 

not mark my face " 643 

Within my bosom " 646 

My boding heart pants " 64? 

shakes thee on my breast " 648 

Knocks at my heart " 659 

my faint heart bleed " 669 

thy death, my living sorrow " 671 

expected of my friends " 718 

my heart stands armed " 779 

closure of my breast " 782 

then my little heart " 783 

my heart longs not " 785 

My face is full of shame, my heart 

of teen " 808 

fearing my love's decease " 1002 

my fault ; the boar provoked my 

tongue " 1003 

'My tongue cannot express my 

grief for one " 1069 

My sighs are blown away, my salt 

tears gone " 1071 

my heart to lead " 1072 

My youth with his ; the more am 

I accurst " 1120 

this is my spite " 1133 

doth my love destroy " 1163 

wither in my breast " 1182 

here in my breast " 1183 

My throbbing heart shall rock thee " 1186 

my sweet love's flower " 1188 

to my desire S L 182 

to my household's grave " 198 

Then my digression is so vile " 202 

engraven in my face " 203 

in my golden coat " 205 

That my posterity " 208 

Shall curse my bones " 209 

dream of my intent " 218 

can my invention make " 225 

Will not my tongue be mute, my 

frail joints shake " 227 

my false heart bleed " 228 

kill'd my son or sire " 232 

to betray my life " 233 

my dear friend " 234 

he is my kinsman, my dear friend " 237 

My will is strong " 243 

in my eager eyes " 254 

in my hjind being lock'd " 260 

Afiection is my captain " 271 

My heart shall never countermand " 276 

My part is youth " 278 

Desire my pilot is, beauty my prize " 279 

be my gods, my guide " 351 

My will is back'd " 352 

tell my loving tale " 480 

must my will abide " 486 

13 



My — My will that marks thee for my 

earth's delight . R L 487 

with all my might " 488 

my attempt will bring " 491 

even in my soul " 498 

force must work my way " 513 

Tender my suit " 534 

' My husband is thy friend " 582 

My sighs, like whirlwinds " 586 

with my tears, my sighs, my groans " 588 

Melt at my tears " 594 

my heaved-up hands " 638 

'my uncontrolled tide " 645 

Yield to my love " 668 

And my true eyes " 748 

Upon my cheeks " 756 

of my cureless crime " 772 

co-partners in my pain " 789 

Mingling my talk with tears, my 

grief with groans " 797 

character'd in my brow " 807 

my loathsome trespass in my looks " 812 

will tell my story " 813 

Will couple my reproach " 816 

tuning my defame " 817 

' Let my good name " 820 

My honey lost " 836 

no perfection of my summer left " 837 

My Collatine would else " 916 

Be guilty of my death, since of my 

crime " 931 

Cancell'd my fortunes " 984 

Since that my case " 1022 

my confirm'd despite " 1026 

let forth my foul-defiled blood " 1029 

my honour lives in me " 1032 

thou livest in my defame " 1033 

mistress of my fate " 1069 

with my trespass " 1070 

acquit my forced offence " 1071 

^ with my attaint * " 1072 

' Nor fold my fault " 1073 

My sable ground " 1074 

My tongue shall utter all " 1076 

purge my impure tale " 1078 

through my window " 1089 

Brand not my forehead " 1091 

And in my hearing " 1123 

My restless discord " 1124 

my dishevell'd hair " ...... 1129 

against my heart " 1137 

But with my body my poor soul's 

pollution " 1157 

My body or my soul " 1163 

So must my soul " 1169 

till my Collatine " 1177 

of my untimely death " 1178 

stop my breath " 1180 

My stained blood " 1181 

in my testament " 1183 

'My honour I'll bequeath " 1184 

my body so dishonoured " 1185 

shall my fame be bred " 1188 

For in my death " 1189 

My shame so dead " 1190 

My resolution, love " 1193 

And, for my sake " 1197 

abridgement of my will " 1198 

My soul and body " 1199 



MY 



194 



MY 



My — My resolution, husband R L 1200 

that makes my woun^ " 1201 

My shame be his that did my fame 

confound " 1202 

And all my fame " 1203 

My blood shall wash " 1207 

My life's foul deed, my life's fair end " 1208 

Yield to my hand; my hand shall 

conquer thee " 1210 

' My girl,' quoth she " 1270 

grief of my sustaining " 1272 

it small avails my mood " 1273 

my sluggard negligence " 1278 

One of my husband's men " 1291 

A letter to my lord, my love, my 

dear " 1293 

My woes are tedious, though my 

words are brief " 1309 

At Ardea to my lord " 1332 

with my lamenting tongue " 1465 

And with my tears " 1468 

And with my knife " 1469 

That with my nails " 1472 

so my Troy did perish " 1547 

And my laments " 1616 

in my chamber came " 1626 

And entertain my love " 1629 

If thou my love's desire " 1631 

yoke thy liking to my will " 1633 

My fame, and thy " 1638 

And then against my heart " 1640 

So should my shame " 1643 

my poor self weak " 1646 

My bloody judge forbade my 

tongue to speak " 1648 

That my poor beauty " 1651 

Though my gross blood " 1655 

spotless is my mind " 1656 

to my sorrow lendeth " 1676 

My woe too sensible " 1678 

And for my sate " 1681 

revenged on my foe " 1683 

the quality of my offence " 1702 

May my pure mind " 1704 

My low-declined honour " 1705 

By my excuse " 1715 

my old age new born " 1759 

my image thou hast torn " 1762 

beauty of my glass " 1763 

My sorrow's interest " 1797 

' she was my wife " 1802 

' My daughter ' and ' my wife " 1804 

'my daughter' and 'my wife " 1806 

Let my unsounded self " 1819 

Shall sum my count and make my 

old excuse Son 2 11 

I may change my mind " 10 9 

my love, you know " 13 13 

do I my judgement pluck " 14 1 

my knowledge I derive " 14 9 

before my sight " 15 10 

than my barren rhyme " 16 4 

or my pupil pen " 16 10 

believe my verse " 17 1 

So should my papers " 17 9 

and in my rhyme " 17 14 

my love's fair brow " 19 9 
My love shall in my verse ever 

live young " 19 14 



My — master-mistress of my passion Son 

to my purpose " 

my love is as fair " 

My glass shall not . " 

my days should expiate " 

raiment of my heart " 

O, let my books " 

of my speaking breast " 

in table of my heart " 

My body is the frame " 

Which in my bosom's shop " 

Are windows to my breast " 

Lord of my love " 

my duty strongly knit " 

not to show my wit " 

that guides my moving " 

on my tatter'd loving " 

then not show my head " 

haste me to my bed " 

a journey in my head " 

To work my mind " 

For then my thoughts " 

keep my drooping eyelids " 

my soul's imaginary sight " 

to my sightless view " 
by day my limbs, by night my mind " 

draw my sorrows longer " 

beweep my outcast state " 

with my bootless cries " 

and curse my fate " 

and then my state " 

my state with kings " 

my dear time's waste " 

of my lovers gone " 

my well-contented day " 

my bones with dust " 

Reserve them for my love " 

Had ray friend's Muse " 

Even so my sun " 

splendour on my brow " 

for this my love " 

travel forth without my cloak " 

o'ertake me in my way " 

on my storm-beaten face " 

physic to my grief " 

war is in my love " 

Lest my bewailed guilt " 

Take all my comfort " 

I make my love " 

How can my Muse " 

pour'st into my verse " 

If my slight Muse " 

all my loves, my love " 

No love, my love, that thou " 
if for my love thou my love re- 

ceivest " 

for my love thou usest " 

thee all my poverty " 

mightst my seat forbear " 

it is not all my grief " 

is of my wailing chief " 

And for my sake " 
Sutfering my friend for my sake • " 

my loss is my love's gain " 

my friend hath found " 

And both for my sake " 

my friend and I are one " 
my flesh were thought • " 

not stop my way " 



20 


2 


20 


12 


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10 


22 


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4 


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6 


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9 


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10 


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3 


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7 


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9 


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10 


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13 


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3 


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12 


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6 


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10 


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3 


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7 


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9 


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10 


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12 


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13 


44 


1 


44 


2 



MY 



195 



MY 



Sly — ^my foot did stand 
leisure with my moan 
The first my thought, the other 

my desire 
My life, being made of four 
my heart thy picture's sight 
My heart mine eye the freedom 
My heart doth plead 
And my heart's right 
With my love's picture then my 

eye doth feast 
to the painted banquet bids my 

heart 
mine eye is my heart's guest 
thy picture or my love 
my thoughts canst move 
thy picture in my sight 
Awakes my heart 
when I took my way 
That to my use 
my jewels trifles are 
now my greatest grief 
closure of my breast 
frown on my defects 
And this my hand 
my weary travel's end 
tired with my woe 
put this in my mind 
My grief lies onward and my joy 

behind 
Thus can my love 
Of my dull bearer 
my poor beast then find 
with my desire keep pace 
shall excuse my jade 
keeps you as my chest 
Whilst I, my sovereign 
with my jealous thought 
my verse shall stand 
My heavy eyelids 
desire my slumbers 
do mock my sight 
into my deeds to pry 
It is my love 
doth my rest defeat 
all my soul and all my every part 
inward in my heart 
But when my glass 
Painting my age 
Against my love 
My sweet love's beauty, though my 

lover's life 
and take my love 
my love may still shine 
I leave my love alone 
my poor name rehearse 
with my life decay 
After my death 
My name be buried where my 

body is 
My life hath in thig 
My spirit is thine 
my body being dead 
you to my thoughts as food 
may see my pleasure 
Why is my verse so barren 
almost tell my name 
are still my argument 
So all my best is 



Son 



44 


5 


44 


12 


45 


3 


45 


7 


46 


3 


46 


4 


46 


5 


46 


14 



47 



47 


6 


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7 


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9 


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11 


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13 


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14 


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1 


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3 


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5 


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6 


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11 


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2 


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11 


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2 


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5 


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13 


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14 


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2 


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5 


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9 


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12 


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9 


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6 


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9 


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13 


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2 


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8 


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4 


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6 


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10 


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11 


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2 


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4 


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9 


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14 


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1 


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12 


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12 


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14 


66 


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11 


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12 


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3 


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11 


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3 


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8 


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10 


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1 


75 


8 


76 


1 


76 


7 


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10 


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11 



My— So is my love Son 76 

invoked thee for my Muse " 78 

assistance in my verse " 78 

pen hath got my use " 78 

thou art all my art " 78 

my rude ignorance " 78 

My verse alone " 79 

But now my gracious numbers " 79 

And my sick Muse " 79 

My saucy bark " 80 

my love was my decay " 80 

be my gentle verse " 81 

such virtue hath my pen " 81 

married to my Muse " 82 

a limit past my praise " 82 

silence for my sin " 83 

shall be most my glory " 83 

My tongue-tied Muse " 85 

that is in my thought " 85 

for my dumb thoughts " 85 
my ripe thoughts in my brain in- 

hearse " 86 

my verse astonished " 86 

of my silence cannot boast " 86 

too dear for my possessing " 87 

My bonds in thee " 87 

where is my deserving " 87 

so my patent back " 87 

And place my merit " 88 

bending all my loving thoughts " 88 

Such is my love " 88 

Speak of my lameness " 89 

and in my tongue " 89 

my deeds to cross " 90 

my heart hath 'scaped " 90 

are not my measure " 91 

my life hath end " 92 

Since that my life " 92 

hath my absence been " 97 

from my love's breath " 99 

In my love's veins " 99 

my love's sweet face " 100 

Give my love fame " 100 

on my love depends " 101 

My love is strengthen'd " 102 

greet it with my lays " 102 

sometime hold my tongue " 102 

dull you with my song " 102 

my Muse brings forth " 103 

my added praise beside " 103 

my blunt invention " 103 

Dulling my lines " 103 

to no other pass my verses tend " 103 

in my verse can sit " 103 

Let not my love " 105 

Nor my beloved " 105 

all alike my songs " 105 

Kind is my love to-day " 105 

Therefore my verse " 105 

is all my argument " 105 

is my invention spent " 105 

the lease of my true love " 107 

My love looks fresh " 107 

to thee my true spirit " 108 

That may express my love " 108 

seem'd my flame to qualify " 109 

As from my soul " 109 

That is my home " 109 

bring water for my stain " 109 



2 

10 

13 
3 
9 
2 
5 
7 
6 

10 
1 
3 
5 
9 

13 
3 
1 
6 

13 

14 
1 
4 
7 
8 

11 

13 
1 
2 
3 
5 
7 

9 

11 

3 

10 

2 

4 

2 

4 

5 



MY 



196 



MY 



My — in my nature reign'd Son 

Save thou, my rose; in it thou art 

my all " 

my heart another youth " 

thee my best of love " 

next my heaven the best " 

O, for my sake " 

of my harmful deeds " 

for my life provide " 

my name receives a brand " 

my nature is subdued " 

'gainst my strong infection " 

starap'd upon my brow " 
O'er-green my bad, my good allow " 

You are my all " 

To know my shames " 

That my steel'd sense " 

that my adder's sense " 

how with my neglect " 

in my purpose bred " 

mine eye is in my mind " 

My most true mind " 

Or whether doth my mind " 

'tis flattery in my seeing " 

And my great mind " 

Yet then my judgement " 

My most full flame " 

Book both my wilfulness " 

Since my appeal says " 

did I frame my feeding " 

hath my heart committed " 

rebuked to my content " 

under my transgression bow " 

Unless my nerves were brass " 

by my unkindness shaken " 

My deepest sense " 

to my sportive blood " 

Or on my frailties " 

At my abuses reckon " 

my deeds must not be shown " 

are within my brain " 

If my dear love " 

With my extern " 

take thou my oblation " 

thou, my lovely boy " 
Therefore my mistress' eyes " 
my music, music play'st " 
Whilst my poor lips " 
My mistress' eyes " 
from ray mistress reeks " 
My mistress, when she walks " 

1 think my love as rare " 
to my dear doting heart " 
in my judgement's place " 
ruth upon my pain " 
makes my heart to groan " 
gives my friend and me " 
my sweet'st friend " 
And my next self " 
Prison my heart " 
my friend's heart let my poor 

heart bail " 

my heart be his guard " 

use rigour in my gaol " 

to be my comfort still " 

debtor for my sate " 

my unkind abuse " 

hide my will in thine " 

And in my will " 



109 


14 


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7 


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8 


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My — my love-suit, sweet, fulfil Son 136 4 

and my will one " 136 6 

Make but my name " 136 13 

for my name is ' Will " 136 14 

of my heart is tied " 137 8 

Why should my heart " 137 9 

Which my heart knows " 137 10 

things right true my heart " 137 13 

When my love swears " 138 1 

she knows my days are past " 138 6 

lays upon ray heart " 139 2 

but in my sight " 139 5 

more than my o'er-press'd defence " 139 8 

my love well knows " 139 9 

from my face she turns my foes " 139 11 

And rid my pain " 139 14 

My tongue-tied patience " 140 2 

of my pity-wanting pain " 140 4 

And in my madness " 140 10 
But my five wits nor my five senses 

can " 141 9 

But 'tis my heart " 141 3 
Only my plague thus far I count 

my gain " 141 13 

Love is my sin " 142 1 

Hate of my sin ' " 142 2 

and my loud crying " 143 14 

my female evil " 144 5 
Tempteth my better angel from 

my side " 144 6 

would corrupt my saint " 144 7 

my angel be turn'd fiend " 144 9 
Till my bad angel fire my good 

one out " 144 14 

saw my woeful state " 145 4 

And saved my life " 145 14 

centre of my sinful earth " 146 1 

My love is as a fever " 147 1 

My reason, the physician to my love " 147 5 

My thoughts and my discourse " 147 11 

Love put in my head " 148 1 

is my judgement fled " 148 3 

my false eyes dote " 148 5 

I mistake my view " 148 11 

I do call my friend - " 149 5 

all my best doth worship " 149 11 

my heart to sway " 150 2 

the lie to my true sight " 150 3 

That, in my mind " 150 8 

not abhor my state " 150 12 

urge not my ami3s " 151 3 

guilty of my faults " 151 4 
My nobler part to my gross body's 

treason " 151 5 

My soul doth tell my body " 151 7 

For all my vows " 152 7 

And all my honest faith " 152 8 

But at my mistress' eye " 153 9 

would touch my breast " 153 10 

the bath for my help lies " 153 13 

my mistress' eyes " 153 14 

but I, my mistress' thrall " 154 12 

My spirits to attend L 3 

it was to gain my grace " 79 

My woeful self " 143 

and was my own fee-simple " 144 

Threw my affections . " 146 

gave him all ray flower " 147 

as some my equals did " 148 



MY 



197 



NAME 



My — upon these terms I held my city L C 176 

of my suffeiing youth " 178 

of my holy vows afraid " 179 

All my offences " 183 

my heart so much as warmed '' 191 

Or my affection put " 192 

Or any of my leisures " 193 

my origin and ender " 222 

But, O my sweet " 239 

in that my boast is true " 246 

their fountains in my well " 255 

My parts had power " 260 

to my sweet design " 278 

and undei'take my troth " 280 

were levell'd on my face " 282 

resolved my reason into tears " 296 

my white stole of chastity I daff'd " 297 

Shook off my sober guards " ....^ 298 
When my love swears P P 1 1 

my years bo past the best "16 

But wherefore says my love "19 

My better angel is a man "23 

My worser spirit a woman "24 

soon to hell, my female evil "25 

my better angel from my side "26 

my saint to be a devil "27 

my angel be turn'd fiend "29 
my bad angel fire my good one out " 2 14 

Persuade my heart "33 

My vow was earthly ' "37 

My vow was breath "39 

Fair is my love "71 

Dreading my love " 7 10 

See, in my thigh,' quoth she " 9 12 

he seized on my lips " 11 9 

my lady at this bay " 11 13 

O, my love, my love is young " 12 10 

Ah, neither be my share " 14 1 

that kept my rest away " 14 2 

on the doubts of my decay '• 14 4 

Yet at my parting " 14 7 

to jest at my exile " 14 9 

My heart doth charge " 15 2 

I post unto my pretty " 15 9 

For now my song is ended " 16 16 

my hand hath sworn " 17 11 

My flocks feed not "18 1 

My ewes breed not " 18 2 

My rams speed not " 18 3 

All my merry jigs " 18 9 

All my lady's love " 18 10 

•Wrought all my loss " 18 14 

My shepherd's pipe can sound " 18 27 

My wether's bell rings " 18 28 

My curtal dog, that wont " 18 29 

My sighs so deep " 18 31 

to see my doleful plight " 18 33 

the cause of all my moan " 18 51 
Lest that my mistress hear my song " 19 50 

To teach my tongue " 19 52 

Live with me and be my love " 20 1 

live with me and be my love " 20 16 

Myrtle — hasteth to a myrtle grove VA 865 

Under a myrtle shade P P 11 2 

Embroider'd all with leaves of 

myrtle " 20 12 
Which a grove of myrtles made " 21 4 

Myself— ' Thrice fairer than myself VA 7 

To sell myself I can ' " 513 



Myself— Before I know myself VA 525 

Unlike myself thou hear'st " 712 

Myself a weakling R L 584 

' To kill myself,' quoth she " 1156 

either to myself was nearer " 1165 

Myself, thy friend, will kill myself, 

thy foe " 1196 

Myself was stirring " 1280 

As I, not for myself Son 22 10 

For thee and for myself " 27 14 

And look upon myself " 29 4 

myself almost despising " 29 9 

Myself corrupting " 35 7 

And 'gainst myself " 35 11 

against myself uprear " 49 11 

And for myself " 62 7 

shows me myself indeed " 62 9 

'Tis thee, myself, that for myself " 62 13 

against myself I'll fight " 88 3 

that to myself I do " 88 11 

myself will bear all wrong " 88 14 

As I'll myself disgrace " 89 7 

For thee against myself " 89 13 

might I from myself depart " 109 3 

So that myself bring water " 109 8 

And made myself a motley " 110 2 

when I saw myself to win "119 4 

I swear it to myself alone " 131 8 

Me from myself " 133 5 

Of him, myself, and thee " 133 7 

I myself am mortgaged " 134 2 

Myself I'll forfeit " 134 3 

I against myself " 149 2 

Am of myself, all tyrant " 149 4 

Revenge upon myself " 149 8 

do I in myself respect " 149 9 

Fresh to myself L C 76 

Love to myself " 77 

Finding myself in honour " 150 

where I myself must render " ..... 221 

Though to myself forsworn P P 5 3 
a word for shadows like myself " 14 11 

Nail — with her nails her flesh doth 

tear R L 739 

That with my nails " 1472 

senseless Sinon with her nails " 1564 

Naked — in her naked bed VA 397 

His naked armour R L 188 

all naked, will bestow it Son 26 8 

naked and concealed fiend L C 317 

And stood stark naked P P 6 10 

Name — usurp'd his name V A 794 

to his hateful name " 994 

Haply that name of chaste R L 8 

Collatine's high name " 108 

wound'st his princely name " 599 

dishonour in thy name " 621 

her crying babe with Tarquin's 

name " 814 

Let my good name " 820 

titles to a ragged name " 892 

throws forth Tarquin's name " 171'' 

as if the name he tore " 1787 

that honour from thy name Son 36 12 

lose name of single one " 39 6 

as my poor name rehearse " 71 11 

My name be buried " 72 11 

doth almost tell my name " 76 7 



NAME 



198 



NEIGHBOUR 



Name — spirit doth use your name Son 80 2 

Your name from hence . " 81 5 

Thy sweet beloved name " 89 10 

of thy budding name " 95 3 

Naming tliy name " 95 8 

I hallow'd thy fair name " 108 8 

my name receives a brand " 111 5 

it bore not beauty's name " 127 2 

Sweet beauty hath no name " 127 7 

Make but my name thy love " 136 13 

for my name is ' Will " 136 14 

But rising at thy name " 151 9 

Single nature's double name P T 39 

JVarne — thou didst name the boar VA 641 

But ere I name him H L 1688 

Ifameless — blurr'd with nameless 

bastardy " 522 

Naming — Naming thy name Son 95 8 

Napkin — her napkin to her eyne L C 15 

Narcissus — Narcissus so himself V A 161 

had Narcissus seen her R L 265 

Nativity— descried in men's nativity " 538 

Nativity, once in the main Son 60 5 

Nature — Nature that made thee V A 11 

By law of nature " 171 

with nature's workmanship " .... 291 

Till forging Nature " 729 

workmanship of nature . " 734 

Swear Nature's death " 744 

Now Nature cares not " 9.53 

Are nature's faults R L ..... 5.39 

by nature they delight " 697 

In scorn of nature " 1374 

Nature's bequest gives nothing Son 4 3 

nature calls thee to be gone " 4 11 

Nature hath not made " 11 9 

nature's changing course " 18 8 

with Nature's own hand " 20 1 

Nature as she wrought thee " 20 10 

rarities of nature's truth " 60 11 

now Nature bankrupt is " 67 9 

for a map doth Nature store " 68 13 

what nature made so clear " 84 10 

husband nature's riches " 94 6 

though in my nature reign'd " 109 9 

my nature is subdued " 111 6 

by nature to subsist " 122 6 

Nature, sovereign mistress " 126 5 

hath put on nature's power " 127 5 

of one by nature's outwards L C 80 

Each stone's dear nature " 210 

Nature hath charged me " 220 

Showing fair nature " 311 

Single nature's double name P T 39 

Nay — Nay, more than iiint VA 200 

Nay, do not struggle " 710 

'Nay, then,' quoth Aden " 769 

Nay, if you read this line Son 71 5 

Nay, if thou lour'st on me " 149 7 

There a nay is placed P P 18 12 

and say thee nay " 19 20 

A woman's nay doth stand " 19 42 

Near — with others all too near Son 61 14 

dreading the winter's near " 97 14 

that I come so near " 136 1 

since I am near slain " 139 13 

when their deaths be near " 140 7 

come thou not near P T 8 

Nearer — to myself was nearer R L 1165 



Nearly — touches me more nearly Son 42 4 

Necessary — gives to ... . wrinkles " 108 11 

Neck — Whose sinewy neck VA 99 

his neck a sweet embrace " 539 

And on his neck " 592 

still hanging by his neck " 593 

His short thick neck " 627 

some catch her by the neck " 872 

One on another's neck Son 131 11 

Neck'd— The strong-neck'd steed VA 263 

Nectar — Such nectar from his lips " 572 

Need— what needs a second striking " 250 

if thou needs wilt hunt " 673 

thou needs must have " 759 

you need not fear " 1083 

I need not fear to die R L 1052 

an accessary needs must be Son 35 13 
of posting is no need " 51 4 
Where cheeks need blood " 82 14 
that you did painting need " 83 1 
Then need I not to fear " 92 5 
Truth needs no colour " 101 6 
Because he needs no praise " 101 9 
Needs must I under my transgres- 
sion bow " 120 3 
Nor need I tallies " 122 10 
needs would touch ray breast " 153 10 

that needs will taste L C 167 

As they must needs P P % 2 

conceit needs no defence "88 

He will help thee in thy need " 21 52 

Need'st — What need'st thou wound Son 139 7 

Needeth — needeth then apologies R L 31 

Needing — ere that there was true 

needing Son 118 8 

All help needing PP 18 24 

Needle— wherein her needle sticks R L 317 

the needle his finger pricks " 319 

Needy — And needy nothing Son 66 3 

Ne'er — in battle ne'er did bow V A 99 

ne'er pleased her babe " 974 

Ne'er saw the beauteous livery " 1107 

Ne'er settled equally " 1139 

still blasts and ne'er grows old R L 49 

But they ne'er meet " 903 

sin ne'er gives a fee " 913 

ne'er touch'd earthly faces Son 17 8 

I must ne'er love him " 89 14 

this shall I ne'er know " 144 13 

Till now did ne'er invite L C 182 

but ne'er was harmed " 194 

Ne'er to pluck thee PP 17 12 

Thy like ne'er was " 18 50 

Ne'er-cloying — your .... sweetness Son 118 5 

Neglect — so then we do neglect R L 152 

For thy neglect of truth Son 101 2 

Mark how with my neglect " 112 12 
Neglected— Neglected all, with swift 

intent R L 46 

Whilst her neglected child Son 143 5 

Negligence— blame my sluggard RL 1278 

braided in loose negligence L C 35 

Neigh — snorts and neighs aloud VA 202 

he neighs, he bounds " 265 

and neighs unto her " 307 

Shall neigh, — no dull flesh Son 51 11 
Neighbour — from forth a copse that 

neighbours by VA ^59 

all the neighbour caves " 830 



NEIGHBOUR 



199 



NEWS 



Neighbour— shadow'd by his neigh- 
bour's ear i2 L 1416 

Neither — neither eyes nor ears V A 437 

can neither fight nor fly R L 230 

Cheeks neither red nor pale " 1510 

Yet neither may possess " 1794 

Neither in inward worth Son 16 11 

neither lie nor his compeers " 86 7 

neither party is nor true L C 186 

neither sting, knot, nor confine " 265 

but neither true nor trusty P P 1 2 

though excellent in neither " 7 18 

Ah, neither be my share " 14 1 

Neither too young " 19 6 

Neither two nor one P T 40 

To themselves yet either neither " 43 

Nerve — Unless my nerves were brass Son 120 4 

Nest — birds to their nest V A 532 

hatch in sparrows' nests R L 849 

swan in her watery nest " 1611 

Death is now the phoenix' nest P T 56 

Nestor — you see grave Nestor stand iJ L 1401 

loss of Nestor's golden words " 1420 

Net — lies tangled in a net V A 67 

Never — where never serpent hisses " 17 

thy lips shall never open " 48 

but never to obey " 61 

never to remove " 81 

Never did passenger " 91 

in battle ne'er did bow " 99 

Never can blab " 126 

can never grave it " 376 

I never shall regard " 377 

never lost again " 408 

never waxeth strong " 420 

Will never rise " 480 

never four such lamps " 489 

O, never let their crimson liveries " 506 

feeds, yet never fllleth " 548 

tushes never sheathed " 617 

never relieved by any " 708 

and are never done " 846 

ne'er pleased her babe " 974 

and never woman yet " 1007 

never wound the heart " 1042 

And never fright " 1098 

Ne'er saw the beauteous livery " 1107 

never did he bless " 1119 

Ne'er settled equally " 1139 

Still blasts and ne'er grows old R L 49 

Birds never limed " 88 

But she, that never coped " ..... 99 

Self-love had never drown'd him " 266 

shall never countermand mine eye " 276 

that will never be forgot " 536 

she never may behold the day " 746 

have never practised how " 748 

vanities can never last " 894 

But they ne'er meet " 903 

sin ne'er gives a fee " 913 

shall never come to growths " 1062 

trespass never will dispense " 1070 

And never be forgot " 1644 

that never was inclined " 1657 

rose might never die Son 1 2 
heavenly touches ne'er touch'd 

earthly faces " 17 8 

A closet never pierced " 46 6 

shall never cut from memory " 63 11 



Never — I never saw that you Son 83 1 

I must ne'er love him " 89 14 

if never intermix'd "101 8 

you never can be old " 104 1 

never kept seat in one " 105 14 

O, never say that I was false " 109 1 

Never believe, though " 109 9 

I never more will grind " 110 10 

and is never shaken " 116 6 

I never writ, nor no man " 116 14 

full of your ne'er-cloying sweetness " 118 5 

itself so blessed never " 119 6 

never can be miss'd " 122 8 

I never saw a goddess go " 130 11 

this shall I ne'er know " 144 13 

that never touch'd his hand L C 141 

ne'er invite, nor never woo " 182 

but ne'er was harmed " 194 

never faith could hold PP 5 2 
are seld or never found " 13 7 
Ne'er to pluck thee " 17 12 
Thy like ne'er was " 18 50 
Press never thou to choose anew " 19 34 
and never for to saint " 19 44 

Never-conquer'd — Thy .... fort R L 482 

Never-ending — date of , . . . woes " 935 

Never-resting — For .... time Son 5 5 

New — in Tarquin new ambition bred i2 i 411 

Foretell new storms " 1589 

my old age new born " 1759 

This were to be new made Son 2 13 

1 engraft you new " 15 14 
and her old face new " 27 12 
new wail my dear time's waste " 30 4 
Which I new pay " 30 12 
By new unfolding " 52 12 
in Grecian tires are painted new " 53 8 
where two contracted new " 56 10 
If there be nothing new " 59 1 
to dress his beauty new " 08 12 
so barren of new pride " 76 1 
dressing old words new " 76 11 
sun is daily new and old " 76 13 
To take a new acquaintance " 77 12 
though alter'd new " 93 3 
Our love was new " 102 5 
What's new to speak, what new to 

register " 108 3 

offences of affections new " 110 4 

and new faith torn " 152 3 
In vowing new hate after new love 

bearing " 152 4 

Cupid got new fire " 153 14 

new lodged and newly deified L C 84 

And new pervert a reconciled maid " 329 

New-appearing — to his .... sight Son 7 3 

New-bleeding— Of proofs .... L C 153 

New-born^mine honour is ... . R L 1190 

Newer — to mourn some newer way " 1365 

On newer proof to try Son 110 11 

built up with newer might " 123 2 

New-fall'n— As apt as ... . snow V A 354 

New-fangled — though .... ill Son 91 " 

New-flred— Love's brand new-fired " 153 9 

New-found — To new-found methods " 76 4 

New-kill'd— Like to a . . . . bird RL 457 

Newly— was it newly bred " 490 

new lodged and newly-deified L C 84 

News — That sometime true news V A 658 



NEWS 



200 



NO 



News — news from the warlike band R L 255 

No news but health Son 140 8 

New-Sprung — the new-sprung flower F4 1171 

New-waxen — From lips .... pale R L 1663 

Next— Thou art the next of blood VA 1184 

next vouchsafe t' afford R L 1305 

next my heaven the best Som, 110 13 

And my next self " 133 6 

Nibbler— the tender nibbler PP 4 11 

Nice — the painter was so nice R L 1412 

And nice affections wavering L C 97 

Niggard — The niggard prodigal R L 79 

Then, beauteous niggard Son 4 5 

Than niggard truth " 72 8 

Niggarding — makest waste in ... . " 1 12 

Nigh — that she is so nigh V A 341 

No flower was nigh " 1055 

that grazed his cattle nigh L C 57 

Niglit — so shall the day seem night V A 122 

From morn till night " 154 

The night of sorrow " 481 

in water seen by night " 492 

The owl, night's herald " 531 

and bid good-night " 534 

let me say " Good-night " 535 

' Good-night,' quoth she " 537 

this night I'll waste in sorrow " 583 

The night is spent " 717 

' In night,' quoth she " 720 

' Now of this dark night " 727 

and her by night " 732 

that burns by night " 755 

by this black-faced night " 773 

merciless and pitchy night " 821 

and outwore the night " 841 

to spend the night withal " 847 

consort with ugly night " 1041 

rock thee day and night " 1186 

For he the night before R L 15 

Till sable Night • " 117 

and wore out the night " 123 

the dead of night " 162 

and misty night " 356 

resembling dew of night " 396 

one in dead of night " 449 

to this night " 485 

' this night I must " 512 

in blind concealing night " 675 

Tarquin fares this night " 698 

through the dark night " 729 

on the direful night " 741 

' night's 'scapes doth open lay " 747 

unseen secrecy of night " 763 

' O comfort-killing Night " 764 

vaporous and foggy Night " 771 

make perpetual night " 784 

Were Tarquin Night, as he is but 

Night's child " 785 

Through Night's black bosom " 788 

' O Night, thou furnace " 799 

copesmate of ugly Night " 925 

sentinel the night " 942 

O, this dread night " 965 

this cursed crimeful night " 970 

Poor grooms are sightless night " 1013 

and uncheerful Night " 1024 

this false night's abuses " 1075 

And solemn night " 1081 

And therefore still in night " 1085 



Night — what's done by night R L 
weep like the dewy night 
Assail'd by night 
burnt out in tedious nights 
She looks for night 
this night I will inflict 
in hideous night Son 
change your day of youth to sul- 
lied night " 
hung in ghastly night " 
Makes black night beauteous " 
by night my mind " 
is not eased by night " 
But day by night, and night by day " 
the swart^complexion'd night " 
And night doth nightly " 
hid in death's dateless night " 
When in dead night " 
All days are nights " 
And nights bright days " 
to the weary night " 
to age's steepy night " 
by and by black night " 
his compeers by night " 
Give not a windy night " 
did hush the night " 
the day or night " 
that our night of woe " 
Doth follow night " 
as dark as night " 
Good night, good rest P P 
She bade good-night " 
dark dreaming night " 
The night so pack'd, I post " 
the night would post too soon " 
Pack night, peep day ; good day, 

of night now borrow " 
Short, night, to-night, and length 

thyself " 

will calm ere night " 

Nightingale— Save the .... alone P P 

Nightly — For with the .... linen R L 

warble of her nightly sorrow " 
doth nightly make grief's strength Son 

Which nightly gulls him " 

Night-owl — that this will catch R L 

Night-waking — foul .... cat " 

Night-wanderers—. . . . often are V A 

Night-wandering—. . . . weasels R L 

Nill— nill I construe whether P P 

Nimble — Relish your nimble notes B L 

For nimble thought can jump Son 

those jacks that nimble leap " 

Youth is nimble P P 

Nimbly— Nimbly she fastens VA 

Nine — Than those old nine Son 

No — But having no defects V A 

and yet no footing seen " 

' Fie, no more of love " 

but of no woman bred " 

Thou art no man " 

No dog shall rouse thee " 

Taking no notice " 

Therefore no marvel " 

they make no battery " 

or I had no hearing " 

Had I no eyes " 

no more had seen " 

No fisher but the uugrown " 



.... 1092 

.... 1232 

.... 1262 

.... 1379 

.... 1571 

.... 1630 

12 2 



15 
27 
27 
27 
28 
28 
28 
28 
30 
43 
43 
43 
61 
63 
73 
86 
90 
102 
113 
120 
145 
147 
14 
14 
15 
15 
15 



15 17 



15 18 

19 14 

21 8 

680 

.... 1080 

28 14 



86 



10 
360 
554 
825 
307 



1126 

44 7 



5 
6 
38 
10 
138 
148 
185 
214 
215 
240 
341 
390 
426 
428 
433 
504 
52S 



NO 



201 



NO 



No — now no more resisteth VA 563 

she can no more detain Mm " 577 

no longer to restrain him " 579 

He tells her, no ; to-morrow " 587 

You h'^ve no reason " 612 

and takes no rest " 647 

"which no encounter dare " 676 

Ko matter where " 715 

No, lady, no ; my heart " 785 

have him seen no more " 819 

if she said 'No " 852 

no tidings of her love " 867 

it is no gentle chase " 883 

bids them fear no more " 899 

she will no further " 905 

no, it cannot be " 937 

thou hast no eyes " 939 

' No, no,' quoth she " 997 

Which knows no pity " 1000 

No flower was nigh, no grass " 1055 

where no breach should be " 1066 

henceforth no creature wear " 1081 

^Having no fair to lose " 1083 

now no more reflect " 1130 

is no cause of fear " 1153 

no secret bushes fear B L 88 

inward ill no outward harm " 91 

Could pick no meaning " 100 

She touch'd no unknown baits, 

nor fear'd no hooks " 103 

No cloudy show " 115 

there's no death supposed " 133 

if there be no self-trust " 158 

no comfortable star did lend " 164 

no noise but owls' and wolves' " 165 

hold it for no sin " 209 

finds no excuse nor end " 238 

no liate in loving " 240 

with no more " 339 

fearing no such thing " 363 

there were no strife " 405 

their lord no bearing yoke " 409 

and hears no heedful friends " 495 

no device can take " 535 

wilderness where are no laws " 544 

that knows no gentle right " 545 

No penetrable entrance " 559 

He is no woodman " 580 

O, if no harder " 593 

no outrageous thing " 607 

'No more,' quoth he " 667 

While Lust is in his pridg, no ex- 
clamation " 705 

1 have no one to blush " 792 

Have no perfection " 837 

But no perfection is so absolute " 853 

Having no other pleasure " 860 

We have no good " 873 

Thou grant'st no time " 908 

doth me no right " 1027 

But this no slaughterhouse " 1039 

no, that cannot be " 1049 

No object but her passion's strength " 1103 

and hath no words " 1105 

loves no stops " 1124 

think no shame of me " 1204 

No cause, but company " 1236 

No more than wax " 1245 

No man inveigh " 1254 



No — without or yea or no JR L 1340 

but laid no words " 1351 

no semblance did remain " 1453 

The painter was no god " 1461 

no guilty instance gave " 1511 

no water thence proceeds " 1552 

He hath no power " 1594 

Wliere no excuse can give " 1614 

No rightful plea " 1649 

no flood by raining slaketh " 1677 

' No, no,' quoth she, ' no dame here- 
after living " 1714 

That I no more can see " 1764 

and last no longer " 1765 

That no man could distinguish " 1785 

let no mourner say " 1797 

nor no remembrance Son 5 12 

That thou no form "96 

No love toward others " 9 13 

No longer yours " 13 2 

Find no determination " 13 6 

Nor draw no lines " 19 10 

for myself no quiet find " 27 14 

no whit disdaineth " 33 13 

For no man " 34 7 

No more be grieved " 35 1 

No love, my love " 40 3 

No matter then although " 44 5 

but then no longer glad " 45 13 

I can allege no cause " 49 14 

of posting is no need " 51 4 

no motion shall I know " 51 8 

Then can no horse " 51 9 

no dull flesh " 51 11 

I have no precious time " 57 3 

he thinks no ill " 57 14 

O, no ! thy love " 61 9 

there is no remedy " 62 3 

no face so gracious " 62 5 
No shape so true, no truth of such 

account " 62 6 

is no stronger than a flower " 65 4 

no exchequer now but his " 67 11 

Making no summer " 68 11 

Robbing no old to dress " 68 12 

No longer mourn for me " 71 1 

And live no more to shame " 72 12 

pursuing no delight " 75 11 

no praise to thee " 79 12 

your fair no painting set " 83 2 

No, neither he " 86 7 

but waking no such matter " 87 14 

making no defence " 89 4 

no more shall dwell " 89 10 

And life no longer " 92 3 

that fears no blot " 92 13 

no hatred in thine eye " 93 5 

' Truth needs no colour " 101 6 

Beauty no pencil " 101 7 

Because he needs no praise " 101 9 

if I no more can write " 103 5 

For to no other pass " 103 11 

and no pace perceived " 104 10 

Counting no old thing old " 108 7 

what shall have no end "110 9 

No bitterness that I will bitter think " 111 11 

For it no form delivers "113 5 

hath the mind no part "113 7 

knew no reason why " 115 3 



NO 



202 



NOR 



Uo — O, no ! it is an eyer-fixed mark Son 116 5 

nor no man ever loved " 116 14 

have no leisure taken " 120 7 

No, I am that I am " 121 9 

No, Time, thou shalt not " 123 1 

No, it was builded far ' " 124 5 

No, let me be obsequious " 125 9 

knows no art " 125 11 
beauty hath no name, no holy 

bower " 127 7 

no beauty lack " 127 11 

Enjoy'd no sooner " 129 5 

and no sooner had " 129 6 

But no such roses " 130 6 

no fair acceptance shine " 135 8 
Let no unkind, no fair beseechers 

kill " 135 13 

No news but health " 140 8 

be rich no more " 146 12 

no more dying then " 146 14 

Which have no correspondence " 148 2 

as all men's : no " 148 8 

No marvel then " 148 11 

stays no farther reason " 151 8 

No want of conscience " 151 13 

But found no cure " 153 13 

and to no love beside L C 77 

which did no form receive " 241 

it is no fault of mine P P 3 12 

conceit needs no defence "88 

and yet no cause I have " 10 7 

no rubbing will refresh " 13 8 

no cement can redress " 13 10 

pipe can sound no deal " 18 27 

There is no heaven " 19 45 

Is no friend in misery " 21 32 

No man will supply thy want " 21 38 

Use his company no more " 21 50 

and no space was seen P T 30 

Leaving no posterity " 59 

Noble — with noble disposition R L 1695 

noble by the sway L C 108 

Which late her noble suit " 234 

Nobler — My nobler part Son 151 6 

Nobly— Thou nobly base R L 660 

Noise — his ill-resounding noise V A 919 

No noise but owls' and wolves' R L 165 

lesser noise than shallow fords " 1329 

None — deep desire hath none V A 389 

But none is best " 971 

if none of those R L 44 

when none may spy him " 881 

and be nurse to none " 1162 

But none where all distress " 1446 

though none it ever cured " 1581 

and they none of ours " ...... 1757 

Thou single wilt prove none Son 8 14 

that thou none lovest " 10 4 

O, none but unthrifts " 13 13 

But you like none, none you " 53 14 

O, none, unless this miracle " 65 13 

When yellow leaves, or none " 73 2 

power to hurt and will do none " 94 1 

yet I none could see " 99 14 

None else to me, nor I to none " 112 7 

yet none knows well " 129 13 
Among a number one is reckon'd 

none " 136 8 

to none was ever said L C 180 



None — none of the mind L C 184 

Such looks as none could look P P 4 4 

None fairer, nor none falser "76 

I see that there is none . " 18 54 

None takes pity on thy pain " 21 20 

None alive will pity me " 21 28 

Two distincts, division none P T 27 

Love hath reason, reason none • " 47 

Non-payment— Say, for ... . VA 521 

Noon — May set at noon R L 784 

out-going in thy noon Son 7 13 

Noon-tide — his weary .... prick RL 781 

Nor — nor brag not of thy might VA 113 

nor know not what we mean " 126 

nor will not know it " 409 

neither eyes nor ears, to hear nor 

see " 437 

nor hear, nor touch " 440 

Bonnet nor veil henceforth " 1081 

Nor sun nor wind " 1082 

But king nor peer to such B L 21 

Nor read the subtle-shining secre- 
cies " 101 

nor fear'd no hooks " 103 

Nor could she moralize " 104 

can neither fight nor fly " 230 

finds no excuse nor end " 238 

Nor children's tears nor mothers' 

groans respecting " 431 

Nor aught obeys " 546 

Nor shall he smile at thee " 1065 

Nor laugh with his companions " 1066 

Nor fold my fault " 1073 

nor law nor limit knows " 1120 

loves no stops nor rests " 1124 

heat nor freezing cold " 1145 

Nor why her fair cheeks " 1225 

Cheeks neither red nor pale " 1510 

Nor ashy pale the fear that " 1512 

Nor it, nor no remembrance Son 5 12 
Nor can I fortune to brief minute? 

tell " 14 5 
nor outward fair " 16 11 
Nor lose possession " 18 10 
Nor shall Death brag " 18 ' 11 
Nor draw no lines " 19 10 
remove nor be removed " 25 14 
Nor can thy shame " 34 9 
Nor thou with public kindness " 36 11 
poor, nor despised " 37 9 
nor the gilded monuments " 55 1 
Nor Mars his sword nor war's 
, quick fire " 55 7 
Nor services to do " 57 4 
Nor dare I chide " 57 5 
Nor think the bitterness " 57 7 
Nor dare I question " 57 9 
nor stone, nor earth, nor bound- 
less sea " 65 1 
Nor gates of steel " 05 8 
nor me nor you " 72 12 
neither he, nor his compeers " 86 7 
nor that affable famiUar ghost " 86 9 
Yet nor the lays of birds, nor the 

sweet smell " 98 5 

Nor did I wonder " 98 9 

Nor praise the deep vermillion " 98 10 

nor red nor white " 99 10 

Nor my beloved " 105 2 



NOR 



203 



NOT 



Son 107 


1 


" 10.8 


11 


" 111 


12 


" 112 


7 


" 113 


8 


" 116 


14 


" 122 


10 


" 123 


10 


" 124 


6 



Nor — nor the prophetic soul 
Nor gives to necessary wrinkles 
Nor double penance 
nor I to none alive 
Nor his own vision 
nor no man ever loved 
Nor need I tallies 
at the i^resent nor the past 
not in smiling pomp, nor falls 
it nor grows with heat nor drowns 

with showers " 124 12 

Nor that full star " 132 7 

nor he will not be free " 134 5 

nor thou belied " 140 13 

Nor are mine ears " 141 5 

Nor tender feeling " 141 6 

Nor taste, nor smell " 141 7 

nor my five senses can " 141 9 

Nor youth all quit L C 13 

nor loose nor tied in formal plat " 29 

nor being desired yielded " 149 

Nor gives it satisfaction " 162 

ne'er invite, nor never woo " 182 

is nor true nor kind " 186 

vow, hond, nor space " 264 

neither sting, knot, nor confine " 265 

neither true nor trusty PP 7 2 

None fairer nor none falser "76 

her meaning nor her pleasure " 11 12 

young nor yet unwed " 19 6 

Neither two nor one P T 40 

Northern — As lagging fowls before 

the northern blast S L 1335 

Nose — He wrings her nose VA 475 

His nose being shadow'd R L 1416 

Nostril— His nostrils drink the air VA 273 

small head and nostril wide " 296 

Not — And yet not cloy " 19 

though not in lust " 42 

he not proud nor brag not " 113 

mine be not so fair " 116 

why not lips on lips " ..... 120 

our sport is not in sight " 124 

know not what we mean " 126 

let not advantage slip " 129 

• should not be wasted " 130 

not gather'd in their prime " 131 

I were not for thee " 137 

Thou canst not see " 139 

Not gross to sink " 150 

And were I not immortal " 197 

and canst not feel " 201 

had not brought forth thee " 204 

he will not in her arms " 226 

there he could not die " 246 

he did not lack " 299 

they know not whether " 304 

they had not seen them " 357 

dares not be so bold " 401 

'I know not love,' quoth he, 'nor 

will not know it " 409 

and I will not owe it " 411 

it will not ope the gate " 424 

O, would thou hadst not " 428 

Add that I could not see " 440 

Would they not wish " 447 

Had not his clouded with " 490 

Are they not quickly told " 520 

seek not to know me " 525 



Not— not all she listeth VA 564 

not like a pale-faced coward " 569 

she had not suck'd " 572 

must not repel a lover " 573 

He will not manage her " 598 

good queen, it will not be " 607 

yet she is not loved " 610 

know'st not what it is " 615 

Not thy soft hands " 633 

Come not within " 639 

not to dissemble " 941 

Didst thou not mark my face ? was 

it not white " 643 

Saw'st thou not signs " 644 

Grew I not faint, and fell I not 

downright " 645 

do not struggle, for thou shalt not 

rise " 710 

And not the least " 745 

not in dark obscurity " 760 

And will not let " 780 

longs not to groan " 785 

I hate not love " 789 

Call it not love " 793 

Love surfeits not " 803 

more I dare not say " 805 

dare not stay the field " 894 

she knows not whither " 904 

And not death's ebon dart " 943 

Now Nature cares not " 953 

Not to believe " 986 

Death is not to blame " 992 

It was not she " 998 

'Tis not my fault " 1003 

lives and must not die " 1017 

The grass stoops not " 1028 

he could not die, he is not dead " 1060 

you need not fear " 1083 

he would not fear him " 1094 

Who did not whet " 1113 

shall not match his woe " 1140 

It shall not fear " 1154 

their loves shall not enjoy " 1164 

shall not be one minute " 1187 

Wherein I will not kiss " 1188 

and not be seen " 1194 

Collatine unwisely did not let B L 10 

all could not satisfy " 96 

That what they have not " 135 

and lend it not " 190 

I their father had not bin " 210 

Will he not wake " 219 

Will not my tongue " 227 

Or were he not " 234 

is not her own " 241 

Love thrives not " 270 

will not be dismay'd " 273 

will not incline " 292 

Is not inured " 321 

could not stay him " 323 

Slack'd, not suppress'd " 425 

She dares not look " 458 

bequeath not to their lot " ?'34 

not their own infamy " 539 

not to foul desire " 574 

' Reward not hospitality " 575 

Mud not the fountain " 577 

Mar not the thing " 578 

do not then ensnare me " 584 



NOT 



204 



NOT 



Not— Thou look'st not like deceit; 




do not deceive me R L .... 


. 585 


Thou art not what thou seem'st " ... 


. 600 


Thou seem'st not what thou art " ... 


. 601 


What darest thou not when once " ... 


. 606 


Draw not tliy sword " ... 


. 626 


Not to seducing lust " ... 


. 639 


Turns not, hut swells " ... 


. 646 


alter not his taste " ... 


. 651 


And not the puddle " ... 


. 658 


should not the greater hide " ... 


. 66.3 


The cedar stoops not " ... 


. 664 


I will not hear thee " ... 


. 667 


if not, enforced hate " ... 


. 668 


could not forestall their will " ... 


. 728 


' They think not " ... 


. 750 


should not peep again " ... 


.. 788 


Let not the jealous Day " ... 


.. 800 


' Make me not object " ... 


.. 806 


that know not how " ... 


.. 810 


in peace is wounded, not in war " ... 


.. 831 


Which not themselves " ... 


.. 833 


could not put him back " ... 


.. 843 


doth not pollute " ... 


.. 854 


Not spend the dowry " .. 


.. 938 


pity not his moans " .- 


.. 977 


I force not argument " ... 


.. 1021 


Since thou could'st not defend " .. 


.. 1034 


I need not fear to die " .. 


.. 1052 


thou shalt not know " •• 


.. 1058 


I will not wrong " .. 


.. 1060 


He shall not boast " .. 


.. 1063 


thy interest was not bought " .. 


.. 1067 


I will not poison " .. 


.. 1072 


I will not paint " .. 


.. 1074 


Brand not my forehead " .. 


... 1091 


not infant sorrows " .. 


... 1096 


A woeful hostess brooks not " .. 


... 1125 


thou sing'st not " .. 


... 1142 


That knows not parching heat " . 


... 1145 


Then let it not " .. 


.. 1174 


Yet die I will not " .. 


... 1177 


Faint not, faint heart " .. 


.. 1209 


But durst not ask " .. 


.. 1223 


Thou call them not " . 


... 1244 


Not that devour'd " .. 


... 1256 


0, let it not be hild " .. 


... 1257 


but not her griefs " . 


... 1313 


She dares not thereof make " . 


... 1314 


She would not blot " . 


... 1.322 


and not a tongue " . 


... 1463 


and not with fire " . 


... 1491 


could not mistrust " . 


... 1516 


lodged not a mind " . 


... 1530 


and yet not wise " . 


... 1550 


' his wounds will not he sore " . 


... 1568 


Lucrece is not free " . 


... 1624 


I should not live " . 


... 1642 


That was not forced " . 


... 1657 


hath not said " . 


... 1699 


And why not I " . 


.... 1708 


could not speak " . 


... 1718 


Thou wast not to this end " . 


.... 1755 


and not thy father thee " . 


.... 1771 


' do not take away " 


.... 1796 


do not steep thy heart " 


.... 1828 


if now thou not renewest Son 


3 3 


remember'd not to be " 


3 13 


yet canst not live " 


4 8 



Not — were not summer's distillation 

left Son 5 
Then let not winter's rugged hand 

deface " 6 

is not forbidden usury " 6 

Be not self-will'd " 6 

Sweets with sweets war not " 8 

thou receivest not gladly " 8 

stick'st not to conspire " 10 

hath not made for store " 11 

not let that copy die " 11 

Not from the stars " 14 

But not to tell " 14 

do not you a mightier way " 16 

shows not half your parts " 17 

summer shall not fade " 18 

O, carve not with thy hours " 19 

but not acquainted " 20 

So is it not with me " 21 

though not so bright " 21 
I will not praise that purpose not 

to sell " 21 

shall not persuade me " 22 

As I, not for myself " 22 

Presume not on thy heart " 22 

not to give back again " 22 

know not the heart " 24 

I may not remove " 25 

not to show my wit " 26 

then not show my head " 26 

is not eased by night " 28 

When sparkling stars twire not " 28 

as if not paid before " 30 

not for their rhyme " 32 

'Tis not enough " 34 

cures not the disgrace " 34 

not love's sole eifect " 36 

I may not evermore " 36 

But do not so " 36 

So then I am not lame " 37 

Were it not thy sour leisure " 39 

we must not be foes " 40 

it is not all my grief " 42 

should not stop my way " 44 

that I am not thought " 44 

For thou not farther " 47 

have I not lock'd up " 48 

where thou art not " 48 

rider loved not speed " 50 

will not every hour survey " 52 

Sweet roses do not so " 54 

Not marble, nor the gilded " 55 

be it not said " 56 

and do not kill " 56 

Not blame your pleasure " 58 

is not so great " 61 

rocks impregnable are not so stout " 65 

matcheth not thy show " 69 

shall not be thy defect " 70 

Either not assail'd " 70 

mask'd not thy show " 70 

this line, remember not " 71 

Do not so much " 71 

do I not glance aside " 76 

Then thank him not " 79 

eyes not yet created " 81 

thou wert not married " 82 

For I impair not beauty " 83 

lends not some small glory " 84 



1 
5 

13 
2 
3 
6 
9 

14 
1 
3 
1 
4 
9 
9 
3 
1 

11 

14 

1 
10 
13 
14 
14 
14 

4 
14 

3 
12 
12 

7 



7 
9 

13 
9 

10 

14 
1 
2 
9 

11 
9 

10 
8 
3 

11 
1 
1 
7 

14 
9 
7 

13 
1 

10 

13 
5 

n 

3 
13 
10 

1 
11 

6 



NOT 



205 



NOT 



Not— Not making worse 


Son 84 


10 


I was not sick 


" 86 


12 


wortli tlien uot knowing 


" 87 


9 


Tlion canst not, love 


" 89 


5 


And do not drop 


" 90 


4 


All, do not, when my heart 


" 90 


5 


Give not a windy night 


" 90 


7 


do not leave me last 


" 90 


9 


will not seem so 


" 90 


14 


are not my measure 


" 91 


7 


need I not to fear 


" 92 


5 


Thou canst not vex me 


" 92 


9 


yet I know it not 


" 92 


14 


answer not thy show 


" 93 


14 


That do not do the thing 


" 94 


2 


But do not so 


" 96 


13 


If not from my love's 


" 99 


3 


wilt thou not haply say 


" 101 


5 


Excuse not silence 


" 101 


10 


I love not less 


" 102 


2 


Not that the summer 


" 102 


9 


Because I would not 


" 102 


14 


0, blame me not 


« 103 


5 


Were it not sinful 


" 103 


9 


Let not my love 


" 105 


1 


They had not skill 


" 106 


12 


Not mine own fears 


" 107 


1 


Which hath not figured 


" 108 


2 


Weighs not the dust 


" 108 


10 


not with time 


" 109 


7 


That did not better 


" 111 


3 


I could not love you dearer 


" 115 


2 


might I not then say 


" 115 


10 


might I not say so 


" 115 


13 


Let me not to the marriage 


" 116 


1 


Love is not love 


" 116 


2 


Love's not Time's fool 


" IIG 


9 


Love alters not 


" 116 


11 


But shoot not at me 


" 117 


12 


The ills that were not, grew 


" 118 


10 


When not to be receives 


" 121 


2 


Not by our feeling 


" 121 


4 


must not be shown 


" 121 


12 


could not so much hold 


" 122 


9 


No, Time, thou shalt not boast 


« 123 


1 


Not wondering at 


" 123 


10 


It suffers not in smiling 


" 124 


6 


It fears not policy 


" 124 


9 


Have I not seen dwellers 


" 125 


5 


. which is not mix'd 


" 125 


11 


but not still keep 


" 126 


10 


black was not counted fair 


" 127 


1 


bore not beauty's name 


" 127 


2 


if not lives in disgrace 


" 127 


8 


who, not born fair, no beauty lack 


" 127 


11 


cruel, not to trust 


" 129 


4 


face hath not the power 


" 131 


6 


I dare not be so bold 


" 131 


7 


is not false I swear 


" 131 


9 


truly not the morning 


" 132 


5 


Is't not enough 


" 133 


3 


Thou canst not then 


" 133 


12 


But thou wilt not, nor lie will not 






be free 


" 134 


5 


yet am I not free 


" 134 


14 


Not once vouchsafe 


" 135 


6 


see not what they see 


" 137 


2 


say this is not 


" 137 


11 


says she not she is unjust 


" 138 


9 



Not — And wherefore say not &)ra 138 10 

not to have years told " 138 12 

O, call not me "139 1 

Wound me not " 139 3 

slay me not by art " 139 4 

Yet do not so " 139 13 

do not press ■ " 140 1 

Though not to love " 140 6 

I may not be so " 140 13 

I do not love thee " 141 1 

it merits not reproving " 142 4 

not from those lips " 142 5 

Not prizing her poor infant's " 143 8 

yet not directly tell " 144 10 

saying ' not you " 145 14 

prescriptions are not kept " 147 6 

to say it is not so " 148 6 

If it be not " 148 7 

Love's eye is not so true " 148 8 

sees not till heaven " 148 12 

say I love thee not " 149 1 

Do I not think on thee " 149 3 

do I not spend " 149 7 

doth not grace the day " 150 4 

not abhor my state " 150 12 

Yet who knows not " 151 2 

urge not my amiss " 151 3 

water cools not love " 154 14 

Time had not scythed L C 12 

would not break from thence " 34 

that lets not bounty fall " 41 

Let it not tell your judgement " 73 

Not age, but sorrow " 74 

not in his case " 116 

Pieced not his grace " 119 

my own fee-simple not in part " 144 

Yet did I not " 148 

what will not stay " 159 

And be not of my holy vows " 179 

Love made them not " 185 

Not one whose flame " 191 

that I hoard them not " 220 

The thing we have not, mastering 

what not strives " 240 

her absence valiant, not her might " 245 

Not to be tempted " '251 

to water will not wear " 291 

that is not warmed here " 292 

That not a heart " 309 

would not be so lover'd " 320 

say not I that I am old P P 1 10 

loves not to have years told " 1 12 

yet not directly tell " 2 10 

I shall not know " 2 13 

Did not the heavenly rhetoric "31 

could not hold argument "32 

deserves not punishment "34 

I forswore not thee "36 

what fool is not so wise " 3 13 

would not touch the bait " 4 11 

if not to beauty vowed "52 

Which, not to anger bent " 5 12 

O do not love that wrong " 5 13 

Yet not so wistly " 6 12 

why was not I a flood " 6 14 

but not so fair as fickle "71 
he should not pass those grounds "98 

And would not take " 11 12 

Fare well I could not " 14 6 



NOT 



206 



NOW 



NofH-Not daring trust PP 15 4 

Yet not for me " 15 16 

Alas, she could not help it " 16 12 

My flocks feed not " 18 1 

My ewes breed not " 18 2 

My rams speed not " 18 3 

Plays not at all " 18 30 

Clear wells spring not " 18 37 

Sweet birds sing not " 18 38 

Green plants bring not " 18 39 

Smooth not thy tongue " 19 8 

you had not had it then " 19 24 

Spare not to spend " 19 26 

be thou not slack " 19 35 

shall not know " 19 40 

Have you not heard it said " 19 41 

She will not stick to round me " 19 51 

they will not cheer thee " 21 22 

come thou not near P T 8 

Hearts, remote, yet not asunder " 29 

the self was not the same " 38 

'Twas not their infirmity " 60 

Beauty brag, but 'tis not she " 63 

Notary — and notary of shame R L 765 

Note — To note the fighting conflict V A 345 

begins a wailing note " 835 

shamed with the note R L 208 

What did he note " 415 

Eelish your nimble notes " 1126 

one pleasing note do sing Son 8 12 

in thee a thousand errors note " 141 2 

sanctified, of holiest note L C 233 

Noted— but mightily he noted RL 414 

invention in a noted weed Son 76 6 

More flowers I noted " 99 14 

Noteth— poor Venus noteth VA 1057 

Nothing — nothing else he sees " 287 

For nothing else " 288 

nothing but my body's bane " 372 

prove nothing worth " 418 

nothing but the very smell " 441 

nothing in him seem'd R L 94 

nothing by augmenting it " 154 

nothing can afi'ection's course con- 
trol " 500 

the wound that nothing healeth " 731 

Who nothing wants " 1459 

Nature's bequest gives nothing Son 4 3 

And nothing 'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13 

one thing to my purpose nothing " 20 12 

If there be nothing new " 59 1 

And nothing stands " 60 12 

And needy nothing " 66 3 

Want nothing that the thoughts " 69 2 

can nothing worthy prove " 72 4 

to love things nothing worth " 72 14 

nothing thence but sweetness " 93 12 

Nothing, sweet boy " 108 5 

To leave for nothing " 109 12 

For nothing this wide universe " 109 13 
To me are nothing novel, nothing 

strange " 123 3 

are nothing like the sun " 130 1 

In nothing art thou black " 131 13 

For nothing hold me " 136 11 

That nothing me, a something " 136 12 

left'st me nothing PP 10 8 

nothing of thee still " 10 10 

That nothing could be used " 16 10 



Notice — Taking no notice VA 341 

Notorious — thou notorious bawd R L 886 

Nought — Alas,- he nought esteems V A 631 

Beauty hath nought " 638 

nought at all respecting " 911 

nought at all effecting " 912 

call'd him all to nought " 993 

For day hath nought to do R L 1092 

his mood with nought agrees " 1095 

presenteth nought but show Son 15 3 

Keceiving nought by elements " 44 13 

stay and think of nought " 57 11 

doth stand for nought P P 19 42 

Nourish'd — that which it was .... by Son 73 12 

Novel — To me are nothing novel " 123 3 

Now — stalled up, and even now V A 39 

Now doth she stroke his cheek, 

now doth he frown " 45 

as I entreat thee now " 97 

And now Adonis " 181 

now she weeps, and now she fain " 221 

And now her sobs " 222 

Now gazeth she on him, now on 

the ground " 224 

how doth she now for wits " 249 

Now which way " 253 

now his woven girths " 266 

now stand on end " 272 

What cares he now " 285 

he now prepares " 303 

now the happy season " 327 

now her cheek was pale " 347 

Now was she just before him " 349 

gently now she takes him " 361 

now press'd with bearing " 430 

now is turn'd to day " 481 

But now I lived " 497 

But now I died " 498 

Now let me say " 535 

Now quick desire " 547 

He now obeys, and now no more 

resisteth " 563 

now she can no more " 577 

Now is she in the very lists " 595 

And now his grief " 701 

And now 'tis dark " 719 

Now of this dark night " 727 

now it sleeps alone " .... 786 

now I will away " 807 

now she beats her heart " 829 

For now she knows " 883 

now she will no further " 905 

Now Nature cares not " 953 

now wind, now rain " 965 

For now reviving joy " 977 

Now she unweaves " 991 

Now she adds honours " 994 

they have wept till now " 1062 

Whose tongue is music now " 1077 

now no more reflect " 1130 

now thinks he R L 78 

Now leaden slumber " 124 

Such hazard now must " 155 

now stole upon the time " 162 

Now serves the season " 166 

And now this lustful lord " 169 

That now he vows a league, and 

now invasion " 287 

Now is he come " 337 



NOW 



207 



o 



Now — For now against himself B L 717 

Where now I have no one " 792 

So am I now " 1049 

And therefore now I need not " 1052 

Her letter now is seal'd " 1331 

For now 'tis stale to sigh " 1362 

But now the mindful messenger " 1583 

And now this pale swan " 1611 

are now depending " 1615 

now attend me _ " 1682 

now Lucrece is unlived " 1754 

But now that fair fresh mirror " 1760 

But now he throws " 1814 

now set thy long-experienced wit " 1820 

now, hy the Capitol " 1835 

that art now the world's Son 1 9 
livery, so gazed on now "23 
Now is the time "32 
if now thou not renewest "33 
now converted are " 7 11 
Now stand you on the top " 16 5 
Now see what good turns " 24 9 
which now appear " 31 7 
now is thine alone " 31 12 
mask'd him from me now " 33 12 
hut now come back again " 45 11 
turns now unto the other " 47 2 
now my greatest grief " 48 6 
doth now his gift confound " 60 8 
as I am now " 63 1 
whereof now he's king " 63 6 
do I now fortify " 63 9 
now Nature bankrupt is " 67 9 
no exchequer now but his " 67 11 
died as flowers do now " 68 2 
Now proud as an enjoyer " 75 5 
Now counting best " 75 7 
But now my gracious numbers " 79 3 
if ever, now " 90 1 
Now, while the world " 90 2 
which now seem woe " 90 13 
hence as he shows now " 101 14 
is less pleasant now " 102 9 
till now never kept seat " 105 14 
as you inaster now " 106 8 
now behold these present days " 106 13 
Incertainties now crown themselves " 107 7 
Now with the drops " 107 9 
Now all is done " 110 9 
Now I love you best " 115 10 
now I find true " 119 9 
unkind befriends me now " 120 1 
now becomes a fee " 120 13 
But now is black, beauty's succes- 
sive heir " 127 3 
now I have confess'd " 134 1 
are they now transferred " 137 14 
Now this ill-wresting world " 140 11 

. I desperate now approve " 147 7 

now reason is past care " 147 9 

for now I know thy mind " 149 13 

Till now did ne'er invite L C 182 

And now she would " 249 

And now, to tempt all " 252 

Now all these hearts " 274 

But now are minutes added P P 15 14 

To spite me now " 15 15 

good day, of night now borrow " 15 17 

For now my song is ended " 16 16 



PP 

P T 
L C 

VA 
PL 

Son 



PT 



Now — For now I see 
' Fie, fie, fie,' now would she cry 
Death is now the phoenix' nest 
Nowhere — and nowhere flx'd 
Numb — numbs each feeling part 
Number — numbers seek for thee 
in fresh numbers number all 
numbers to outlive long date 
But now my gracious numbers 
In gentle numbers 
Among a number one is 
Then in the number 
Number there in love was slain 
Number' d — leases of short-number'd 

hours Son 

Nun — and self-loving nuns V A 

was sent me from a nun L C 

to charm a sacred nun " 

Nurse — Being nurse and feeder V A 
desire's foul nurse " 

A nurse's song ne'er pleased " 

nurse of blame 
The nurse, to still her child 
and be nurse to none 
As tender nurse 
Nurse — but to nurse the life 
Nursed — Those children nursed 
Nursest— Thou nursest all 
Nurseth — longer nurseth the disease /Sbra 
Nurtured — Ill-nurtured, crooked V A 
Nuzzling — And nuzzling in his flank " 
Nymph — Stain to all nymphs " 

Or, like a nymph " 

Whilst many nymphs Son 

Nymphs back peeping P P 



16 
13 

50 

27 

892 

896 

6 

12 
3 
6. 
8 
9 

28 



RL 



Son 
RL 

Son 
RL 



124 10 

752 

232 

260 

446 

773 

974 

767 

813 

1162 

22 12 

141 

11 
929 

2 

134 

1115 

9 

147 

154 3 
18 43 



77 



147 



— O, how quick is love VA 

' O, pity,' 'gan she cry " 

O, be not proud " 

O, had thy mother borne " 

O, what a sight it was " 

O, what a war of looks " 

O fairest mover " 

0, give it me " 

0, learn to love " 

O, would thou hadst not " 

But, O, what banquet " 

' O, where am I " 

0, thou didst kill me " 

O, never let their " 

0, had she then " 

0, be advised " 

O, let hun keep " 

0, then imagine this " 

O strange excuse " 

O thou clear god " 

no, it cannot be " 

yes, it may " 

O, how her eyes " 

hard-believing love " 

' Jove,' quoth she ' 

O happiness enjoy'd R L 

O rash-false heat " 

' shame to knighthood " 

O foul dishonour " 

O impious act " 

'0 what excuse " 

O, how her fear " 

O, had they " 



38 
95 
113 
203 
343 
355 
368 
375 
407 
428 
445 
493 
499 
506 
571 
615 
637 
721 
791 
860 
937 
939 
961 
985 
1015 
22 
48 
197 
198 
199 
225 
257 
379 



208 



OBJECT 



O — modest wanton R L 401 

O, if no harder " 593 

O, be remember'd " 607 

0, how are they wrapp'd " 636 

O, that prone lust " 684 

O, deeper sin " 701 

' O comfort-killing Night " 764 

' O hateful, vaporous, and foggy " ..... 771 

' O Night, thou furnace " 799 

' unseen shame " 827 

O, unfelt sore " 828 

O unlook'd-for evil " 846 

O Opportunity, thy guilt " 876 

O, hear me then " 9.30 

O, this dread night " 9G5 

'O Time, thou tutor " 995 

O no, that cannot be " 1049 

' 0, that is gone " 1051 

she sobbing speaks : '0 eye of eyes " 1088 

O, let it not be hild " 1257 

'0, peace!' quoth Lucrece " 1284 

Ulysses, O, what art " 1394 

' O, teach me how to make " 1653 

' O, speak,' quoth she " 1700 

O, from thy cheeks " 1762 

O Time, cease thou thy course " 1765 

'She's mine.' ' 0, mine she is " 1795 

' 0,' quoth Lucretius, ' I did give " 1800 

O, change thy thought Son 10 9 

O, that you were " 13 1 

O, none but unthrifts " 13 13 

0, carve not with thy hours " 19 9 

O, let me, true in love " 21 9 

O, therefore, love " 22 9 

O, let my books " 28 9 

O, learn to read " 23 13 

O, then vouchsafe " 32 9 

O, give thyself " 38 5 

O, how thy worth " 39 1 

O absence, what a torment " 39 9 

O, what excuse " 51 5 

O, how much more " 54 1 

O, let me suffer " 58 5 

O, that record " 59 5 

O, sure I am " 59 13 

O, no! thy love " 61 9 

O, how shall summer's " 65 5 

O fearful meditation " 65 9 

O, none, unless this " 65 13 

O, him she stores " 67 13 

O, if, I say " 71 9 

O, lest the world " 72 1 

O, lest your true love " 72 9 

O, know, sweet love " 76 9 

O, how I faint " 80 1 

O, what a happy title " 92 11 

O, in what sweets " 95 4 

O, what a mansion " 95 9 

O truant Muse " 101 1 

O, blame me not " 103 5 

0, never say that I " 109 1 

O, for my sake " 111 1 

0, 'tis the first " 114 9 

O, no ! it is an ever-fixed " 116 5 

O benefit of ill " 119 9 

O, that our night " ]20 9 

O thou, my lovely boy " 126 1 

O thou minion of her pleasurS " 126 9 

O, let it then as well " 132 10 



0—0, love's best habit Son 138 11 

O, call not me " 139 1 

O, but with mine compare " 142 3 

O me, what eyes " 148 1 

O, how can love's eye " 148 9 

O cunning Love " 148 13 

Canst thou, O cruel " 149 1 

O, from what power " 150 1 

O, though I love " 150 11 

Cried, ' O false blood LC 52 

O appetite, from judgement " 166 

O, then, advance " 225 

But, O my sweet " ..... 239 

O, pardon me " 246 

O, hear me tell " 253 

O most potential love " 264 

O, how the channel " 285 

O father, what a hell " 288 

O cleft ett'ect " 293 

O, that infected moisture " 323 

O, that false fire " 324 

O, that forced thunder " 325 

0, that sad breath " 326 

O, all that borrow'd motion " 327 

O, love's best habit P P 1 11 

O never faith could hold "52 

O do not love that wrong " 5 13 

' O Jove,' quoth she " 6 14 

O yes, dear friend " 10 11 

O, my love, my love " 12 10 

0, sweet shepherd, hie thee " 12 11 

O frowning Fortune " 18 15 

O cruel speeding " 18 25 

Oak — To dry the old oak's sap R L 950 

those thoughts to me like oaks PP 5 4 

Oath— And him by oath R L 410 

and sweet friendship's oath " 569 

the vestal violate her oath " 883 

with an infringed oath " 1061 

Knights, by their oaths " 1694 

why of two oaths' breach Son 152 5 

For all my vows are oaths " 152 7 

For I have sworn deep oaths " 152 9 

Oaths of thy love " 152 10 

to that strong-bonded oath L C 279 

To break an oath P P 3 14 

her oaths of true love "78 

Her faith, her oaths, her tears " 7 12 

Obdurate— Art thou obdurate VA 199 

Obdurate vassals fell exploits R L 429 

Obedience — Whose swift obedience " 1215 

Obey — but never to obey VA 61 

conquerors, his lips obey " 549 

He now obeys " 563 

Nor aught obeys R L 546 

and made their wills obey L C 133 

your miuister, for you obeys " 229 

To whose sound chaste wings obey P T 4 

Obeyed — his stronger strength ... . VA Ill 

Object — her object will away " 255 

Fold in the object " 822 

Make me not object to the tell-tale 

day R L 806 

No object but her passion's strength " 1103 

thousand lamentable objects " 1373 

Gilding the object Son 20 6 

Of his quick objects " 113 7 

As fast as objects " 114 8 

The goodly objects L C 137 



OBJECT 



209 



OF 



Object— With objects manifold L C 216 

Oblation— And take thou my .... Son 125 10 

must your oblations be L C 223 

Oblivion — Planting oblivion, beat- 
ing reason back FA 557 

To feed oblivion S L 947 

Till each to razed oblivion Son 122 7 
Oblivions — 'Gainst death and all- 
oblivious enmity " 55 9 

Obloqny — the author of their R L 523 

Obscure — brakes obscure and rough F4 237 

obscures her silver shine " 728 

Obscurely — evils that sleep B L 1250 

Obscurity — not in dark obscurity V A 760 

Obsequious — a holy and .... tear Son 31 5 

obsequious in thy heart " 125 9 

Obscquy — Keep the .... so strict PT 12 

Observance — Such sweet observance i2 i 1385 

Observed — observed as they flew L C 60 

Obtain— Yet ever to obtain R L 129 

to obtain his lust " 156 

Obtained — his suit may be obtained " 898 

Obtaining — dangers of his will's .... " 128 

Occasion — on what occasion " 1270 

And every light occasion L C 86 

Ocean — Or in the ocean drench'd V A 494 

to stain the ocean of thy blood R L 589 

like a troubled ocean " 655 

Who in a salt-waved ocean " 1231 

Let this sad interim like the ocean 

be Son 56 9 

I have seen the hungry ocean " 64 5 

wide as the ocean is " 80 5 

I pour your ocean L 256 

Odd— they such odd action yield R L 1433 

Odour— For that sweet odour Son 54 4 
Of their sweet deaths are sweetest 

odours made " 54 12 

But why thy odour matcheth not " 69 13 

in odour and in hue " 98 6 

O'er — o'er the downs VA 677 

stain that o'er with silver white R L 56 

rudely o'er his arm " 170 

lion fawneth o'er his prey " 421 

So o'er this sleeping soul " 423 

Who o'er the white sheet " 472 

First hovering o'er the paper " 1297 

with this gives o'er " 1567 

and busy winds give o'er " 1790 

all silver'd o'er with white • Son 12 4 

from woe to woe tell o'er " 30 10 

o'er dull and speechless tribes " 107 12 

say o'er the very same " 108 6 

I was certain o'er incertainty " 115 11 

O'er whom thy fingers walk " 128 11 
I strong o'er them, and you o'er 

me being strong L C 257 

O'ercharged — . . . . with burthen Son 23 8 
O'erflovv — the bounding bank o'er- 

flows R L 1119 

O'ergrcen — So you .... my bad Son 112 4 

O'ergrown — As corn by weeds R L 281 

O'crlook — mayst without attaint 

o'erlook Son 82 2 
O'er-press'd — my ..., defence " 139 8 
O'er-read — Which eyes not yet cre- 
ated shall o'er-read " 81 10 
O'ersnovv'd — Beauty o'ersnow'd and 

bareness "58 

14 



O'erstraw'd— and the top .... V A 1143 

O'ersway — But sad mortality o'er- 

sways their power Son 65 2 

O'ertake — o'ertake me in ray way " 34 3 

O'erwhelming — .... his fair sight VA 183 

O'erworn — ...., despised, rheumatic " 135 

is so much o'erworn " 866 

crush'd and o'erworn Son 63 2 

Of— leave of the weeping morn VA 2 

of pith and livelihood " 26 

coals of glowing fire " 35 

burning of his cheeks " .. 50 

moisture, air of grace " 64 

gardens full of flowers " 65 

direful god of war " 98 

brag not of thy might " 113 

the god of fight " 114 

those fair lips of thine " 115 

Make use of time " 129 

all compact of fire " 149 

be of thyself rejected " 159 

By law of nature " 171 

so in spite of death " 173 

' Fie, no more of love " 185 

heat of this descending " 190 

a shadow for thee of my hairs " 191 

how want of love " 202 

but of no woman bred " 214 

of a man's complexion " 215 

circuit of this ivory pale " 230 

Poor queen of love " 251 

Of the fair breeder " 282 

stirring of a feather " 302 

breeder, full of fear " 320 

Jealous of catching " 321 

aidance of the tongue " 330 

So of concealed sorrow " 333 

conflict of her hue " 345 

what a war of looks " 355 

prison'd in a gaol of snow " 362 

the engine of her thoughts " 367 

approach of sweet desire " 386 

And learn of him " 404 

Say, that the sense of feeling " ..... 439 

the stillitory of thy face " 443 

feeder of the other four " 446 

deadly bullet of a gun " 461 

wounding of a frown " ..... 465 

The night of sorrow " 481 

that hard heart of thine " 500 

this poor heart of mine " 502 

for fear of slips " 515 

The honey fee of parting " 538 

the sweetness of the spoil " 558 

Things out of hope " 567 

with certain of his friends " 588 

the very lists of love " 595 

Of bristly pikes " 620 

As fearful of him, part " 630 

that face of thine " 631 

counsel of their friends " 640 

signs of fear lurk " 644 

of an angry-chafing boar " 662 

The thought of it " 669 

among a flock of sheep " 685 

with a herd of deer " 689 

the hunting of the boar " 711 

' Why, what of that " 717 

expected of my friends " 718 



OF 



210 



OF 



Of— desire sees best of all VA 720 

rob thee of a kiss " 723 

Now of this dark night " 727 

condemti'd of treason " 729 

workmanship of nature " 734 

. Of mad mischances " 738 

heating of the blood " 742 

not the least of all " 745 

despite of fruitless chastity " 751 

of daughters and of sons " 754 

by the rights of time " 759 

reaves his son of life " 766 

closure of my breast " 782 

to be barr'd of rest " 784 

Lust full of forged lies " 804 

full of shame, my heart of teen " 808 

Of those fair arms " 812 

discovery of her way " 82S 

repetition of her moans " 831 

the choir of echoes " 840 

humor of fantastic wits " 850 

lark, weary of rest " 853 

patron of all light " 860 

no tidings of her love " 867 

yelping of the hounds " 881 

proceedings of a drunken brain " 910 

Full of respects " 911 

licking of his wound " 915 

Hateful divorce of love " 932 

as one full of despair " 955 

channel of her bosom dropp'd " 958 

This sound of hope " 976 

face of the sluttish ground " 983 

both of them extremes " 987 

clepes him king of graves " 995 

of all mortal things " 996 

1 felt a kind- of fear " 998 

author of thy slander " 1006 

Tells him of trophies " 1013 

To be of such a weak " 1016 

overthrow of mortal kind " ... 1018 

thou art so full of fear " 1021 

stars ashamed of day " 1032 

cabins of her head " 1038 

disposing of her troubled brain " 1040 

drops of hot desire " 1074 

Of things long since " 1078 

to rob him of his fair " 1086 

pity of his tender years " 1091 

robb'd of his effect " 1132 

' Wonder of time " 1133 

false and full of fraud " 1141 

and too full of riot " 1147 

is no cause of fear " 1153 

It shall be cause of war " 1159 

of a more sweet-smelling sire " 1178 

art the next of blood '■ 1184 

Thus weary of the world " 1189 

wings of false desire R L 2 

Of Collatine's fair love " 7 

that name of 'chaste " 8 

sky of his delight " 12 

treasure of his happy state " 10 

possession of his beauteous mate " 18 

but of a few " 22 

splendour of the sun " 25 

from a world of harm " 28 

doth of itself persuade " 29 

The eyes of men " 30 



Of— Of that rich jewel R L 34 

boast of Lucrece' sovereignty " 36 

issue of a king " 37 

envy of so rich a thing " 39 

if none of those " 44 

Which of them both " 53 

Of either's colour " 66 

The sovereignty of either " 69 

war of lilies and of roses " 71 

wonder of still-gazing eyes "' 84 

in plaits of majesty " 93 

wonder of his eye " 95 

margents of such looks " 102 

fields of fruitful Italy " 107 

wreaths of victory " 110 

purpose of his coming hither " 113 

show of stormy, blustering weather " 115 

mother of dread and fear " 117 

As one of which " 127 

dangers of his will's obtaining " 128 

the profit of excess " 138 

The aim of all " 141 

The death of all " 147 

Of that we have " 152 

want of wit " 153 

the dead of night " 162 

sparks of fire do fly " 177 

dangers of his loathsome enterprise " 184 

armour of still-slaughter'd lust " 188 

a froth of fleeting joy " 212 

dream of my intent " 218 

quittal of such strife " 236 

Full of foul hope and full of fond 

mistrust " 284 

crannies of the place " 310 

smoke of it into his face " 312 

things of trial " 326 

income of each precious thing " 334 

heaven of his thought " 338 

in the midst of his unfruitful prayer " 344 

The eye of heaven " 356 

mercy of his mortal sting " 364 

period of their ill " 380 

cozening the pillow of a lawful kiss " 387 

admired of lewd, unhaUow'd eyes " 392 

dew of niglit " 396 

in the map of death " 402 

A pair of maiden worlds " 407 

Save of their lord " 409 

His rage of lust " 424 

proud of such a dignity " 437 

heart of all her land " 439 

Whose ranks of blue veins " 440 

confusion of their cries " 445 

dead of night " 449 

reason of this rash alarm " 473 

fury of his speed " 501 

worthless slave of thine " 515 

mark of every open eye " 520 

author of their obloquy " 523 

picture of true piety " 542 

wrinkles of his face " 562 

all the form of both " 572 

for fear of this " 614 

lectures of such shame " 618 

the ocean of thy blood " 655 

Instead of love's coy touch " «... 668 

bed of some rascal groom " 671 

breeds months of pain " 690 



OF 



211 



OF 



Of— rifled of her store R L 692 

lord of Eome " 715 

the length of times " 718 

muster troops of cares " 720 

despite of cure " 732 

the load of lust " 734 

burthen of a guilty mind " 735 

secrecy of night " 763 

image of hell " 764 

notary of shame " 765 

nurse of blame " 767 

Grim cave of death " 769 

guilty of my cureless crime " 772 

course of time " 774 

The life of purity " 780 

showers of silver brine " 796 

monuments of lasting moans " 798 

furnace of foul-reeking smoke " 799 

possession of thy gloomy place " 803 

The story of sweet chastity's decay " 808 

breach of holy wedlock " 809 

The branches of another root " 823 

this attaint of mine " 825 

perfection of my summer " 837 

guilty of thy honour's wrack " 841 

Besides, of weariness he did com- 
plain " 845 

And talk'd of virtue " 846 

breakers of their own behests " 852 

the harvest of his wits " 859 

pleasure of his gain " 860 

Guilty thou art of murder and of 

theft " 918 

Guilty of perjury " 919 

Guilty of treason " 920 

Guilty of incest " 921 

copesmate of ugly Night " 925 

carrier of grisly care " 926 

Eater of youth " 927 

Base watch of woes " 928 

Be guilty of my death, since of 

my crime " 931 

date of never-ending woes " 935 

the hate of foes " ..... 936 

dowry of a lawful bed " 938 

the seal of time " 941 

with decay of things " 947 

antiquities of hammer'd steel " 951 

round of Fortune's wheel " 952 

daughters of her daughter " 953 

thought of his committed evil " 972 

his hours of rest " 974 

have time of time's help to despair " 983 

In time of sorrow " 991 

His time of folly and his time of 

sport " 992 

the abusing of his time . " 994 

the help of law " 1022 

smoke of words " „... 1027 

rid me of this shame " 1031 

instrument of death " 1038 

passage of her breath " 1040 

Of that true type " 1050 

A badge of fame " 1054 

The stained taste of violated troth " 1059 

father of his fruit " 1064 

mistress of my fate " 1069 

ground of sin " 1074 

truth of this false night's " 1075 



Of— well-tuned warble of her night- 
ly sorrow It L 1080 

'O eye of eyes " 1088 

for want of skill " 1099 

in a sea of care " 1100 

the bottom of annoy " 1109 

in ken of shore " 1114 

that sing'st of ravishment " 1128 

which of the twain " 1154 

Whose love of either " 1165 

cause of my untimely death " 1178 

sad hour of mine " 1179 

So of shame's ashes shall my fame 

be bred " 1188 

lord of that dear jewel " 1191 

abridgement of my will " 1193 

no shame of me " 1204 

the slander of mine ill " 1207 

This plot of death " 1212 

true mark of modesty " 1220 

durst not ask of her " 1223 

Of those fair suns " 1130 

No cause, but company, of her 

drops spilling " 1236 

impression of strange kinds " 1242 

authors of their ill " 1244 

semblance of a devil " 1246 

Of present death " 1263 

counterfeit of her complaining " 1269 

grief of my sustaining " 1272 

the break of day " 1280 

One of my husband's men " 1291 

press of people at a door " 1301 

Of that unworthy wife " 1304 

the tenour of her woe " 1310 

feeling of her passion . " 1317 

Of her disgrace " 1320 

a part of woe " 1327 

'Tis but a part of sorrow " 1328 

with wind of words " 1330 

Of spirit, life " 1346 

pattern of the worn-out age " 1350 

Of skilful painting " 1367 

the power of Greece " 1368 

In scorn of nature " 1374 

And from the towers of Troy " 1382 

The very eyes of men " 1383 

Of physiognomy might one behold " 1395 

The face of either " 1396 

a press of gaping faces " 1408 

The scalps of many " 1413 

such signs of rage " 1419 

loss of Nestor's " 1420 

the eye of mind " 1426 

walls of strong-besieged Troy " 1429 

a kind of heavy fear " 1435 

the strand of Dardan " 1436 

Of what she was no semblance " 1453 

Of all the Greeks " 1470 

Thy heat of lust " 1473 

This load of wrath " 1474 

trespass of thine eye " 1476 

pleasure of some one " 1478 

plague of many moe " 1479 

though full of cares " 1503 

Of rich-built Ilion " 1524 

signs of truth " 1532 

clear pearls of his " 1553 

balls of quenchless fire " 1554 



OF 



212 



OF 



Of— the current of her sorrow jB L 1569 

feeling of her own grief ' " 1578 

surmise of others' detriment " 1579 

shows of discontent " 1580 

one word of woe " 1605 

dirge of her certain ending " 1612 

the interest of thy bed " 1619 

dead of dark midnight " 1625 

groom of thine " 1632 

act of lust ." 1636 

death of Lucrece " 1645 

hopeless merchant of this loss " 1660 

woe of his, poor she attendeth " 1674 

one pair of weeping eyes " 1680 

this wrong of mine " 1691 

quality of my offence " 1702 

Of hard misfortune " 1713 

Of that polluted prison " 1726 

Some of her blood " 1742 

Of that black blood " 1745 

they none of ours " 1757 

the beauty of my glass " 1763 

conquest of the stronger " 1767 

vexation of his inward soul " 1779 

lord of Eome " 1818 

dew of lamentations " 1829 

death of this true wife " 1841 

of small worth held Son 2 4 

treasure of thy lusty days "26 

'This fair child of mine " 2 10 

tillage of thy husbandry "36 

Of his self-love "38 

April of her jirime " 3 10 

windows of thine age shall see " 3 11 

Despite of wrinkles " 3 12 

So great a sum of sums "48 
Thou of thyself thy sweet self 

dost deceive " 4 10 

pent in walls of glass " 5 10 

If ten of thine ten times " 6 10 

concord of well-tuued sounds "85 

form of thee hast left behind "96 

thou art beloved of many " 10 3 

for love of me • " 10 13 

In one of thine "11 2 

I see barren of leaves " 12 5 
Then of thy beauty do I question 

make " 12 9 
among the wastes of time must go " 12 10 

gusts of winter's day " 13 11 

rage of death's eternal cold " 13 12 

to tell of good or evil luck " 14 3 

Of plagues, of dearths " 14 4 
Or else of thee this I prognosticate " 14 13 
wear their brave state out of 



memory 


" 15 


8 


conceit of this incoustant stay 


" 15 


9 


day of youth to sullied night 


" 15 


12 


Time for love of you 


" 15 


13 


the top of happy hours 


" 16 


5 


So should the lines of life 


" 16 


9 


yourself in eyes of men 


" 16 


12 


the beauty of your eyes 


" 17 


5 


old men of less truth 


" 17 


10 


metre of an antique song 


" 17 


12 


some child of yours alive 


" 17 


13 


the darling buds of May 


" 18 


3 


the eye of heaven shines 


" 18 


5 


possession of that fair 


" 18 


10 



Of — master-mistress of my passion Son 

me of thee defeated " 

couplement of proud compare " 

that like of hearsay well " 

youth and thou are of one date " 

raiment of my heart " 

be of thyself so wary " 

So I, for fear of trust " 

ceremony of love's rite " 

burthen of mine own love's might " 

presagers of my speaking breast " 

in table of my heart " 

Of public honour " 

fortune of such triumphs bars " 

book of honour razed quite " 

Lord of my love " 

good conceit of thine " 

worthy of thy sweet respect " 

the benefit of rest " 

at break of day arising " 

sessions of sweet silent thought " 

remembrance of things past " 

the lack of many a thing " 

expense of many a vauish'd sight " 

account of fore-bemoaned moan " 

As interest of the dead " 

trophies of my lovers gone " 

parts of me to thee did give " 

That due of many " 

hast all the all of me " 

lines of thy deceased lover " 

bettering of the time " 

height of happier men " 

ranks of better equipage " 

Suns of the world may stain " 

of such a salve can speak " 

do deeds of youth " 

comfort of thy worth and truth " 

Or any of these all " 

by a part of all thy glory live " 

the better part of me " 

lose name of single one " 

with thoughts of love " 

taste of what thyself refusest " 

is of ray wailing chief " 
substance of my flesh were thought " 

despite of space " 

large lengths of miles " 

so much of earth " 

badges of cither's woe " 

embassy of love to thee " 

being made of four " 

Of thy fair health "■ 

conquest of thy sight " 

freedom of that right " 

A quest of thoughts " 

inward love of heart " 

thoughts of love doth share a part " 

■ From hands of falsehood, in sure 

wards of trust " 

Thou, best of dearest " 

prey of every vulgar thief " 

closure of my breast " 

reasons find of settled gravity " 

knowledge of mine own desert " 

the strength of laws " 

Of my dull bearer " 

of posting is no need " 
desire, of perfect'st love being made " 



20 


2 


20 


11 


21 


5 


21 


13 


22 


2 


22 


6 


22 


9 


23 


5 


23 


6 


23 


8 


23 


10 


24 


2 


25 


2 


25 


3 


25 


11 


26 


1 


26 


7 


26 


12 


28 


2 


29 


11 


30 


1 


30 


2 


30 


3 


30 


8 


30 


11 


31 


7 


31 


10 


31 


11 


31 


12 


31 


14 


32 


4 


32 


5 


32 


8 


32 


12 


33 


14 


34 


7 


37 


2 


37 


4 


37 


6 


37 


12 


39 


2 


39 


6 


39 


11 


40 


8 


42 


3 


44 


1 


44 


3 


44 


10 


44 


11 


44 


14 


45 


6 


45 


7 


45 


12 


46 


2 


46 


4 


46 


10 


46 


14 


47 


8 


48 


4 


48 


7 


48 


8 


48 


11 


49 


8 


49 


10 


49 


13 


51 


2 


51 


4 


51 


10 



OF 



213 



OF 



Of — point of seldom pleasure S 

Like stones of worth 
millions of strange shadows 
all art of beauty set 
Speak of the spring and foison of 

the year 
shadow of your beauty show 
tincture of the roses 
Of their sweet deaths 
And so of you 
Of princes, shall outlive 
the work of masonry 
record of your memory 
the eyes of all posterity 
The spirit of love 
Beturn of love 
being full of care 
and times of your desire 
bitterness of absence sour 
stay and think of nought 
control your times of pleasure 
account of hours to crave 
absence of your liberty 
accusing you of injury 
pardon of self-doing crime 
burthen of a former child 
Even of five hundred courses of 

the sun 
wonder of your frame 
the wits of former days 
once in the main of light 
rarities of nature's truth 
tenour of thy jealousy 
Sin of self-love 
no truth of such account 
with beauty of thy days 
or vanish'd out of sight 
treasure of his spring 
cost of outworn buried age 
kingdom of the shore 
win of the watery main 
interchange of state 
siege of battering days 
Nor gates of steel 
his spoil of beauty 
seeing of his living hue 
Roses of shadow 
Beggar'd of blood to blush 
And, proud of many 
map of days outworn 
signs of fair were born 
tresses of the dead 
The right of sepulchres 
summer of another's green 
what beauty was of yore 
Those parts of thee 
thought of hearts can mend 
the voice of souls 
the beauty of thy mind 
the rank smell of weeds 
The ornament of beauty 
being woo'd of time 
ambush of young days 
some suspect of ill 
kingdoms of hearts shouldst owe 
speak well of me untrue 
That time of year 
twilight of such day 
the glowing of such fire 



52 


4 


52 


7 


53 


2 


53 


7 


53 


9 


53 


10 


54 


6 


54 


12 


54 


13 


55 


2 


55 


6 


55 


8 


55 


11 


56 


8 


56 


12 


56 


13 


57 


2 


57 


7 


57 


11 


58 


2 


58 


3 


58 


6 


58 


8 


58 


12 


59 


4 


59 


6 


59 


10 


59 


13 


60 


5 


60 


11 


61 


8 


62 


1 


62 


6 


62 


14 


63 


7 


63 


8 


64 


2 


64 


6 


64 


7 


64 


9 


65 


6 


65 


8 


65 


12 


67 


6 


67 


8 


67 


10 


67 


12 


68 


1 


68 


3 


68 


5 


68 


6 


68 


11 


68 


14 


69 


1 


69 


2 


69 


3 


69 


9 


69 


12 


70 


3 


70 


6 


70 


9 


70 


13 


70 


14 


72 


10 


73 


1 


73 


5 


73 


9 



Of — ashes of his youth doth lie Son T. 

the better part of me 
lost the dregs of life 
The prey of worms 
conquest of a wretch's knife 
Too base of thee 
The worth of that is that 
for the peace of you 
so barren of new pride 
I always write of you 
And of this book this learning 
Of mouthed graves will give 
acquaintance of thy mind 
proud of that which I compile 
and born of thee 
travail of a worthier pen 
Yet what of thee 
He robs thee of, and pays it 
when I of you do write 
speaking of your fame 
He of tall building and of goodly 

pride 
breathers of this world are dead 
even in the mouths of men 
Of their fair subject 
stamp of the time-bettering days 
tender of a poet's debt 
Speaking of worth 
in one of your fair eyes 
But he that writes of you 
While comments of your praise 
of well-refined pen 
And to the most of praise 
breath of words respect 
sail of his great verse 
prize of all too precious you 
of my silence cannot boast 
I was not sick of any fear 
The charter of thy worth 
cause of this fair gift 
in the eye of scorn 
Of faults conceal'd 
Speak of my lameness 
haply of our old acquaintance 
the spite of fortune 
rearward of a conquer'd woe 
worst of fortune's might 
And other strains of woe 
with loss of thee 
Of more delight 
of all men's pride I boast 
For term of life 
that love of thine 
the worst of wrongs 
in the least of them 
owners of their faces 
stewards of their excellence 
beauty of thy budding name 
the story of thy days 
but in a kind of praise 
Take heed, dear heart, of this 

large privilege 
loved of more and less 
finger of a throned queen 
strength of all thy state 
pleasure of the fleeting year 
burthen of the prime 
But hope of orphans 
spirit of youth in every thing 



73 


10 


74 


8 


74 


9 


74 


10 


74 


11 


74 


12 


74 


13 


75 


3 


76 


1 


76 


9 


77 


4 


77 


6 


77 


12 


78 


9 


78 


10 


79 


6 


79 


7 


79 


8 


80 


1 


80 


4 


80 


12 


81 


12 


81 


14 


82 


4 


82 


8 


83 


4 


83 


8 


83 


13 


84 


7 


85 


2 


85 


8 


85 


10 


85 


13 


86 


1 


86 


2 


86 


11 


86 


12 


87 


3 


87 


7 


88 


2 


88 


7 


89 


3 


89 


12 


90 


3 


90 


. 6 


90 


12 


90 


13 


90 


14 


91 


11 


91 


12 


92 


2 


92 


4 


92 


5 


92 


6 


94 


7 


94 


8 


95 


3 


95 


5 


95 


7 


95 


13 


96 


3 


96 


5 


96 


12 


97 


2 


97 


7 


97 


10 


98 


3 



OF 



214 



OF 



Of— Yet nor the lays of birds Son 


98 


5 


Of— call the fools of time 


Son 124 


13 


Of different flowers " 


98 


6 


minion of her pleasure 


" 126 


9 


but figures of delight " 


98 


11 


becoming of their woe 


" 127 


13 


pattern of all those " 


98 


12 


inward of thy hand 


" 128 


6 


And buds of marjoram " 


99 


7 


The expense of spirit in a waste 






had stol'n of both " 


99 


10 


of shame 


" 129 


1 


pride of all his growth " 


99 


12 


bloody, full of blame 


" 129 


3 


speak of that which gives " 


100 


2 


morning sun of heaven 


" 132 


5 


thy neglect of truth in beauty " 


101 


2 


grey cheeks of the east 


" 132 


6 


praised of ages yet to be " 


101 


12 


Of him, myself, and thee 


" 133 


7 


in growth of riper days " 


102 


8 


The statute of thy beauty 


" 134 


9 


is of more worth " 


103 


3 


One will of mine 


" 135 


12 


Than of your graces " 


103 


12 


the treasure of thy love 


" 136 


5 


In process of the seasons " 


104 


6 


In things of great receipt 


" 136 


7 


For fear of which " 


104 


13 


Why of eyes' falsehood hast thou 


" 137 


7 


To one of one still such " 


105 


4 


judgement of my heart is tied 


" 137 


8 


chronicle of wasted time " 


106 


1 


that she is made of truth 


" 138 


1 


descriptions of the fairest wights " 


106 


2 


The manner of my pity-wanting 






In praise of ladies dead " 


106 


4 


pain 


" 140 


4 


in the blazon of sweet beauty's best " 


106 


5 


might speak ill of thee 


" 140 


10 


Of hand, of foot, of lip, of eye, of 






AVho, in despite of view 


" 141 


4 


brow " 


106 


6 


the likeness of a man 


" 141 


11 


Of this our time " 


106 


10 


Hate of my sin 


" 142 


2 


Of the wide world's dreaming " 


107 


2 


from those lips of thine 


" 142 


5 


lease of my true love control " 


107 


3 


bonds of love as oft as mine 


" 142 


7 


olives of endless age " 


107 


8 


revenues of their rents 


" 142 


8 


drops of this most balmy time " 


107 


9 


One of her feather'd creatures 


" 143 


2 


Since, spite of him " 


107 


11 


In pursuit of the thing 


" 143 


4 


tombs of brass are spent " 


107 


14 


Two loves I have of comfort 


" 144 


1 


and injury of age " 


108 


10 


the centre of my sinful earth 


" 146 


1 


conceit of love there bred " 


108 


13 


inheritors of this excess 


" 146 


7 


I was false of heart " 


109 


1 


selling hours of dross 


" 146 


11 


That is my home of love " 


109 


5 


Am of myself, all tyrant 


" 149 


4 


besiege all kinds of blood " 


109 


10 


the motion of thine eyes 


" 149 


12 


all thy sum of good " 


109 


12 


becoming of things ill 


" 150 


5 


Made old offences of aflections new " 


110 


4 


very refuse of thy deeds 


" 150 


6 


thee my best of love " 


110 


8 


and warrantise of skill 


" 150 


7 


guilty goddess of my harmful deeds " 


111 


2 


see just cause of hate 


" 150 


10 


Potions of eisel " 


111 


10 


to be beloved of thee 


" 150 


14 


Of others' voices " 


112 


10 


conscience is born of love 


" 151 


2 


Of bird, of flower " 


113 


6 


Lest guilty of my faults 


" 151 


4 


Of his quick objects " 


113 


7 


Proud of this pride 


" 151 


10 


Incapable of more " 


113 


13 


No want of conscience 


" 151 


13 


To make of monsters " 


114 


5 


why of two oaths' breach 


" 152 


5 


change decrees of kings " 


115 


6 


oaths of thy deep kindness 


" 152 


9 


course of altering things " 


115 


8 


Oaths of thy love 


" 152 


10 


fearing of Time's tyranny " 


115 


9 


A maid of Dian's 


" 153 


2 


doubting of the rest " 


115 


12 


valley-fountain of that ground 


" 153 


4 


marriage of true minds " 


116 


1 


holy fire of love 


" 153 


5 


to the edge of doom " 


116 


12 


help of bath desired 


" 153 


11 


the level of your frown " 


117 


11 


many legions of true hearts 


" 154 


6 


virtue of your love " 


117 


14 


the general of hot desire 


" 154 


7 


full of your ne'er-cloying sweetness " 


118 


5 


Tearing of papers 


LC 


6 


And sick of welfare found a kind 






a platted hive of straw 


" 


8 


of meetness " 


118 


7 


The carcass of a beauty 


" 


11 


Which rank of goodness ' 


118 


12 


spite of heaven's fell rage 


" 


13 


so fell sick of you ' 


118 


14 


through lattice of sear'd age 


" 


14 


drunk of Siren tears ' 


119 


1 


In clamours of all size 


" 


21 


out of their spheres ' 


119 


7 


a careless hand of pride 


" 


30 


distraction of this madding fever ' 


119 


8 


Of amber, crystal, and of beaded 






benefit of ill ' 


119 


9 


jet 


" 


37 


pass'd a hell of time ' 


120 


6 


Of folded schedules 


" 


43 


our night of woe ' 


120 


9 


ring of posied gold 


" 


45 


reproach of being ' 


121 


2 


thou register of lies 


" 


52 


Of thee, thy record ' 


122 


8 


This said, in top of rage 


" 


55 


dressings of a former sight ' 


123 


4 


Of court, of city 


" 


59 


but the child of state ' 


124 


1 


and motives of her woe 


" 


03 


blow of thralled discontent " 


124 


7 


in the charity of age 


" 


70 


of short-number'd hours ' 


' 124 


10 


injury of many a blasting hour 


" 


72 



OF 



215 



OFT 



Of— Of one by nature's outwards L C 80 

occasion of the wind " 86 

' Small show of man " 92 

in a pride of truth " 105 

Proud of subjection " 108 

tip of his subduing tongue " 120 

All kind of arguments " 121 

in his craft of will " 126 

Of young, of old, and sexes both 

enchanted " 128 

Of lands and mansions " 138 

mistress of his heart " 142 

Demand of him " 149 

Of proofs new-bleeding " 153 

Of this false jewel " 154 

For fear of harms " 165 

patterns of his foul beguiling " 170 

bastards of his foul adulterate heart " 175 

Have of my suffering " 178 

of my holy vows afraid " 179 

For feasts of love " 181 

Are errors of the blood, none of 

the mind " 184 

less of shame in me " 188 

By how much of me " 189 

Or any of my leisures " 193 

Of paled pearls " 198 

Of grief and blushes " 200 

Effects of terror " 202 

these talents of their hair " ,.... 204 
"With the annexions of fair gems 

enrich'd " 208 

trophies of afiections hot " 218 

Of pensived and subdued desires " 219 

For these, of force must your ob- 
lations be " 223 

' " O, then, advance of yours that 

phraseless hand " 225 

the airy scale of praise " 226 

sister sanctified, of holiest note " 233 

spirits of richest coat " 236 

The scars of battle " 244 

Of stale example " 268 

Of wealth, of filial fear " 270 

The aloes of all forces " 273 

a hell of witchcraft lies " 288 

orb of one particular tear " 289 

inundation of the eyes " 290 

hut an art of craft " 295 

stole of chastity I daflT'd " 297 

a plenitude of subtle matter " 302 

Of burning blushes, or of weeping 

water " 304 

the hail of his all hurting aim " 310 

the garment of a Grace " 316 

moisture of his eye " 323 

she is made of truth P P X 1 
Two loves I have, of comfort and 

despair "21 

rhetoric of thine eye "31 

it is no fault of mine " 3 12 

oaths of true love swearing "78 

of all her pure pretestings " 7 11 

the queen of music, makes " 8 10 

One god is god of both " 8 13 

when the fair queen of love "91 

a spectacle of ruth " 9 n 

nothing of thee still " 10 10 

I pardon crave of thee " 10 11 



Of— Youth is full of pleasance, age 

is full of care P P 12 2 

Youth is full of sport " 12 5 

In spite of physic " 13 12 

the doubts of my decay " 14 4 

the office of mine eyes " 15 4 

good day, of night now borrow " 15 17 

the fairest one of three " 16 1 

That liked of her master " 16 2 
For of the two the trusty knight " 16 11 

was victor of the day " 16 13 

a gift of learning " 16 14 

Causer of this " 18 8 

The cause of all my moan " 18 51 

counsel of some wiser head " 19 5 

make thee a bed of roses " 20 9 

A cap of flowers " 20 11 

with leaves of myrtle " 20 12 

A belt of straw " 20 13 

merry month of May " 21 2 

grove of myrtles made " 21 4 

careless of thy sorrowing " 21 26 

store of crowns be scant " 21 37 

Thus of every grief in heart " 21 55 

bird of loudest lay P T 1 

precurrer of the fiend " 6 

Augur of the fever's end " 7 

fowl of tyrant wing " 10 

and stars of love " 51 

Off— Sometime he scuds far off V A 301 

And all amazed brake off " 469 

far off upon a hill " 697 

By this, far off she hears " 973 

wind would blow it off " 1089 

those far-off eyes look sad R L 1386 

still farther off from thee Son 28 8 

From me far off " 61 14 

From off a hill LC 1 

Shook off my sober guards " 298 

Offence — the like offences prove RL 613 

hates himself for his offence " 733 

To cloak offences " 749 

acquit my forced offence " 1071 

For one's offence " 1483 

the quality of my offence " 1702 

publish Tarquin's foul offence " 1852 

bears the strong offences cross Son 34 12 

excuse the slow offence " 51 1 

comment upon that offence " 89 2 
Made old offences of affections new " 110 4 

All my offences L C 183 

Offend— do offend thine ear Son 8 6 

Offended — for having so offended VA 810 

Offender— With foul offenders R L 612 

The offender's sorrow Son 34 11 

offenders, thus I will excuse ye " 42 5 

Offer— So offers he to give VA 88 

Offer pure incense R L 194 

jest at every gentle offer PP 4 12 

Offlce— their office and their light VA 1039 

Thy princely office R L 628 

Time's office is to fine the hate " 936 

would such an office have " 1000 

These offices, so oft Son 77 13 

Then do thy office, Muse " 101 13 

the office of mine eyes PP 15 4 

Offspring — We are their offspring R L 1757 

Oft — compass'd oft with venturing VA 567. 

oft the eye mistakes " 1068 



OFT 



216 



ON 



Oft — our hearts oft tainted be R L 38 

That oft they interchanged " 70 

doth traffic oft for gaining " 131 

and oft that wealth doth cost " 146 

oft betake him to retire " 174 

By oft predict that I in heaven 

find Son 14 8 

so oft as thou wilt look " 77 13 

So oft have I invoked thee " 78 1 

How oft, when thou " 128 1 

of love as oft as mine " 142 7 

Oft did she heave L C 15 

As oft 'twixt May and April " 102 

Have you not heard it said full 

oft PP 19 41 

Oft«ii — as night-wanderers .... are VA 825 

often from his place R L 565 

to weep are often willing " 1237 

I often did behold " 1758 

often is his gold complexion 

dimm'd Son 18 6 

have often lived alone " 105 13 

And often reading L C 19 

As often shrieking " 20 

These often bathed she " 50 

And often kiss'd and often 'gan 

to tear " 51 

and often men would say " 106 

advice is often seen " 160 

that often there had been P P 6 8 

how often hath she joined "77 

Oftentimes— stories begun VA 845 

Oil- — Dries up his oil " 756 

Old— foul or wrinkled-old " 133 

The text is old " 806 

and old men dote " 837 

Make the young old, the old be- 
come a child " ...;. 1152 

blasts and ne'er grows old R L 49 

or an old man's saw " 244 

To blot old books " 948 

To dry the old oak's sap " 950 

Old woes, not infant sorrows " 1096 

with her old eyes " 1448 

The credulous old Priam " 1522 

Priam, why art thou old " 1550 

like old acquaintance in a trance " 1595 

dear daughter,' old Lucretius cries " 1751 

my old age new born " 1759 

fresh mirror dim and old " 1760 

The old bees die " 1769 

and make my old excuse Son 2 11 

when thou art old " 2 13 

Be scorn'd like old men " 17 10 

do thy worst, old Time " 19 13 

persuade me I am old " 22 1 

and her old face new " 27 12 

And with old woes new wail " 30 4 

Than those old nine " 38 10 

what the old world could say " 59 9 
Bobbing no old to dress his beauty 

new " 68 12 

dressing old words new " 76 11 

sun is daily new and old " 76 13 

of our old acquaintance tell " 89 12 

What old December's bareness " 97 4 

you never can be old " 104 1 

making beautiful old rhyme ' " 106 3 

Counting no old thing old " 108 7 



Old — Made old offences of affections 

new Son 110 4 

foist upon us that is old " 123 6 

In the old age " 127 1 

say not I that I am old " 138 10 

tell your judgement I am old L C 73 

Of young, of old " 128 

say not I that I am old P P 1 10 

Older — on newer proof to try an 

older friend Son 110 11 

Olive — olives of endless age " 107 8 

On — on his sweating palm V A 25 

on a ragged bough " 37 

leaning on their elbows " 44 

Tires with her beak on feathers, 

flesh, and bone " 56 

feedeth on the steam as on a prey " 63 

Who, being look'd on " 87 

Why not lips on lips " 120 

Dance on the sands " 148 

and complain on theft " 160 

Now gazeth she on him, now on 

the ground " 224 

on mountain or in dale " 232 

Graze on my lips " 233 

now stand on end " 272 

on so proud a back " 300 

puts on outward strangeness " 310 

Looks on the dull earth " 340 

mover on this mortal round " 368 

it will set the heart on fire " 388 

take advantage on presented joy " 405 

For on the grass she lies " 473 

strikes her on the cheeks " 475 

having writ on death " 509 

Set thy seal-manual on my wax- 
red lips " 516 

yet complain on drouth " ..... 544 

And on his neck " 692 

He on her belly falls, she on her 

back " 594 

On his bow-back " 619 

on the lion he will venture " 628 

shakes thee on my breast " 648 

on his back doth lie " 663 

And on thy well-breath'd " 678 

And when thou hast on foot " 679 

wit waits on fear " 690 

Stands on his hinder legs " 698 

trodden on by many " 707 

Are on the sudden wasted '■ 749 

That on the earth " 753 

leadeth on to danger " 788 

on earth usurp'd his name " 794 

as one on shore " 817 

Passion on passion " 832 

mounts up on high " 854 

exclaims on Death " ..... 930 

Gloss on the rose " 936 

I rail'd on thee " 1002 

Be wreak'd on him " 1004 

she treads on it so light " 1028 

conquest on her fair delight " 1030 

would he put his bonnet on " 1087 

The fishes spread on it " 1100 

Sorrow on love hereafter " 1136 

waited on with jealousy " 1137 

on the ground lay spill'd " 1167 

baseless edge on his keen appetite P L 9 



ON 



217 



ON 



On — seldom dream on evil R L 87 

His falchion on a flint he softly 

smiteth " 176 

sorrow may on this arise " 180 

roses that on lawn we lay " 258 

reason wait on wrinkled age " 275 

which looks on her " 290 

gazeth on her yet unstained bed " 366 

Swelling on either side " 389 

On the green coverlet " 394 

an April daisy on the grass " 395 

on that he firmly doted " 416 

march'd on to make " 438 

On her bare breast " 439 

to gaze on beauty " 496 

And dotes on what he looks " 497 

put on his shape " 597 

should drop on them " 686 

exclaiming on the direful night " 741 

beating on her breast " 759 

blasts wait on the tender spring " 869 

wait on them " 910 

■waits on greatest state " 1006 

I'll hum on Tarquin still " 1133 

While thou on Tereus " 1134 

Eevenge on him that made me " 1180 

on what occasion break " 1270 

-and on it writ " 1331 

And blushing on her " 1339 

wistly on him gazed " 1355 

Pale cowards, marching on " 1391 

lean'd on another's head " 1415 

Staring on Priam's wounds " 1448 

On this sad shadow Lucrece spends 

her eyes " 1457 

And rail on Pyrrhus " 1467 

Once set on ringing, with his " 1494 

And still on him she gazed " 1531 

and on that pillow lay " 1620 

On thee and thine this night I will 

inflict " 1630 

forced him on so fast " 1670 

To push grief on and back " 1673 

revenged on my foe " 1683 

Himself on her self-slaughter'd 

body threw " 1733 

in on every side " 1739 

to be revenged on her death " 1778 

so gazed on now Son 2 3 

leads summer on "55 

on his golden pilgrimage "78 

Unlook'd on diest " 7 14 
That on himself such murderous 

shame commits " 9 14 

Borne on the bier " 12 8 
Now stand you on the top of 

happy hours " 16 5 

Presume not on thy heart " 22 13 

actor on the stage " 23 1 

gaze therein on thee " 24 12 

Points on me graciously " 26 10 

puts apparel on my tatter'd loving " 26 11 

Looking on darkness " 27 8 

Haply I think on thee " 29 10 

I think on thee " 30 13 

rack on his celestial face " 33 6 

splendour on my brow " 33 10 
dry the rain on my storm-beaten 

face " 34 6 



38 


11 


42 


12 


43 


3 


43 


10 


43 


12 


49 


2 


49 


12 


50 


1 


50 


6 


50 


9 


51 


7 


53 


2 


53 


7 


54 


7 


60 


9 


60 


11 


63 


5 


64 


6 


68 


4 


68 


■ 7 


71 


8 


73 


10 


75 


9 


75 


14 


78 


5 


80 


8 


84 


14 



On — he that calls on thee So)i 

lay on me this cross " 

dreams they look on thee " 

By looking on thee " 

sleep on sightless eyes doth stay " 
frown on my defects " 

reasons on thy part " 

I journey on the way " 

Plods dully on " 

cannot provoke him on " 

mounted on the wind " 

shadows on you tend " 

On Helen's cheek all art of beauty set " 
Hang on such thorns " 

the flourish set on youth " 

Feeds on the rarities " 

travell'd on to age's steepy night " 
Advantage on the kingdom of the 

shore " 

inhabit on a living brow " 

live a second life on second head " 
If thinking on me " 

That on the ashes of his youth 

doth lie " 

feasting on your sight " 

Or gluttoning on all " 

the dumb on high to sing " 

On your broad main " 

Being fond on praise, which makes " 
Comes home again on better judge- 
ment making " 87 12 
bending all my loving thoughts 

on thee " 88 10 

that which on thy humour doth 

depend 
my life on thy revolt doth lie 
comments on thy sport 
As on the finger of a throned queen 
pleasures wait on thee 
Which on thy soft cheek for com- 
plexion dwells 
on thorns did stand 
Spend'st thou thy fury on some 

worthless song 
beauty on my love depends 
dreaming on things to come 
I have look'd on truth 
On newer proof, to try 
That looks on tempests 
And on just proof surmise accu- 
mulate " 117 10 
Or on my frailties why are frailer 

spies 
Which works on leases 
dwellers on form and favour 
put on nature's power 
On purpose laid 
wires grow on her head 
treads on the ground 
but thinking on thy face 
One on another's neck 
Have put on black 
On both sides thus 
grounded on sinful loving 
Shalt thou feed on Death, that 

feeds on men " 146 13 

Feeding on that which doth pre- 
serve the ill " 147 3 
I not think on thee " 149 3 



92 


8 


92 


10 


95 


6 


96 


5 


97 


11 


99 


4 


99 


8 


100 


3 


101 


3 


107 


2 


110 


5 


110 


11 


116 


6 



121 


7 


124 


10 


125 


5 


127 


5 


129 


8 


130 


4 


130 


12 


131 


10 


131 


11 


132 


3 


138 


8 


142 


2 



ON 



218 



ONE 



On — On whom frown'st thou Son 149 6 

if thou lour'st on me " 149 7 

But, love, hate on " 149 13 

Which on it had L C 16 

Their view right on " 26 

For on liis visage " 90 

velvet, on that termless skin " 94 

on this side the verdict went " 113 

So on the tip " 120 

that do on mine depend " 274 

were levell'd on my face " 282 

that on this earth doth shine PP 3 10 

Then fell she on her back " 4 13 

on the brook's green brim " 6 10 

The sun look'd on the world " 6 11 

as this queen on him " 6 12 

he seized on my lips " 11 9 

And with her lips on his " 11 10 

lie wither'd on the ground " 13 9 

descant on the doubts of my decay " 14 4 

Till looking on an Englishman " 16 3 

On a day, alack the day " 17 1 

meetings on the plains " 18 46 

to round me on th' ear " 19 51 

None takes pity on thy pain " 21 20 

They that fawned on him " 21 49 

On the sole Arabian tree P T 2 

Ouce — season once more fits VA 327 

attorney once is mute " 335 

Once more the engine " 367 

And once made perfect " 408 

Ouce more the ruby-colour'd " 451 

kill me once again " 499 

captain once doth yield " 893 

ouce more leap her eyes " 1050 

in his fair welkin once appear S L 116 

Which once corrupted " 294 

ere once she speaks " 567 

when once thou art a king " 606 

Who wayward once " 1095 

Once set on ringing " 1494 

Ere once she can discharge " 1605 

all at once began to say " 1709 

can see what once I was " 1764 

a thousand victories once foil'd Son 25 10 

by fortune once more re-survey " 32 3 

bid your servant ouce adieu " 57 8 

once in the main of light " 60 5 

Though I, once gone " 81 6 

That you were once unkind " 120 1 

how once I su/fer'd " 120 8 

Kot once vouchsafe " 135 6 

And Death once dead " 146 14 

Love-god lying once asleep " 154 1 

To every place at once L 27 

'Once,' quoth she PP 9 9 

So beauty blemish'd once " 13 11 

But if fortune once do frown " 21 47 

One — Ten kisses short as one, one 

long as twenty VA 22 

Over one arm the lusty courser's 

rein " 31 

And one sweet kiss " 84 

not see one wrinkle " „... 139 

for one poor kiss " 207 

Give me one kiss " 209 

And one for interest " 210 

lily fingers one in one " 228 

excel a common one " 293 



One— With one fair hand VA 351 

For one sweet look " 371 

before one leaf put forth " 416 

at thy leisure, one by one " 518 

To one sore sick " 702 

But in one minute's fight " 746 

As one on shore " 817 

as one that unaware " 823 

like one that spies an adder " 878 

remaineth in one place " 885 

as one full of despair " 955 

The one doth flatter thee " 989 

As one with treasure laden " 1022 

Over one shoulder doth she " 1058 

express my grief for one " 1069 

shall not be one minute " 1187 

And every one P L 125 

As one of which " 127 

That one for all or all for one " 144 

Th' one sweetly flatters " 172 

For one sweet grape " 215 

Each one by him enforced " 303 

Imagine her as one in dead of night " 449 

I have no one " 792 

One poor retiring minute " 962 

wouldst thou one hour come back " 965 

to see one that by alms doth live " 986 

continuance tames the one " 1097 

And as one shifts, another straight 

ensues " 1104 

Or one encompass'd with a wind- 
ing maze " 1151 

two sweet babes, when death takes 

one " 1161 

When the one pure, the other " 1164 

The one will live, the other " 1187 

one justly weeps, the other " 1233 

than one hath power to tell " 1288 

One of my husband's men " 1291 

That one might see " 1386 

That one would swear " 1393 

might one behold " 1395 

Here one man's hand " 1415 

Here one being throng'd " 1417 

'Why should the private pleasure 

of some one " 1478 

For one's oflTence why should so 

many fall " 1483 

And one man's lust " 1489 

discharge one word of woe " 1605 

with one poor tired tongue " 1617 

To drown one woe, one pair of 

weeping eyes " 1680 

The one doth call her his " 1793 

be it ten for one Son 6 8 

Mark how one string "89 
Who, all in one, one pleasing note 

do sing " 8 12 

being many, seeming one " 8 13 

In one of thine "11 2 

one most heinous crime " 19 8 

adding one thing to my purpose " 20 12 

youth and thou are of one date " 22 2 

The one by toil, the other " 28 7 

like to one more rich " 29 5 

my sun one early morn " 33 9 

was but one hour mine " 33 11 

undivided loves are one " 36 2 

there is but one respect " 36 5 



ONE 



219 



OR 



One — lose name of single one Son 39 6 

how to make one twain " 39 13 

my friend and I are one " 42 13 
Since every one liath, every one, 

one shade " 53 3 

And you, but one, can every " 53 4 

The one doth shadow ■' 53 10 

Why write I still all one " 76 5 

in one of your fair eyes " 83 13 

I better in one general best " 91 8 

One blushing shame " 99 9 
To one, of one, still such, and 

ever so " 105 4 

One thing expressing " 105 8 

Three themes in one " 105 12 

never kept seat in one " 105 14 

One on another's neck " 131 11 

One will of mine " 135 12 
Think all but one, and me in that 

one 'Will " 135 14 

full with wills, and my will one " 136 6 
Among a number one is reekon'd 

none " 136 8 

in thy stores' account I one must be " 136 10 

Dissuade one foolish heart " 141 10 

One of her feather'd creatures " 143 2 

I guess one angel " 144 12 

fire my good one out " 144 14 

Which one by one L C 38 

schedules had she many a one " 43 

Of one by nature's outwards so 

commended " 80 

The one a palate hath " 167 

Not one whose flame " 191 

orb of one particular tear " 289 

I guess one angel FP 2 12 

fire my good one out " 2 14 

Because thou lovest the one "84 

One god is god of both " 8 13 

One knight loves both " 8 14 

he saw more wounds than one " 9 13 

the fairest one of three " 16 1 

But one must be refused " 16 9 

One silly cross " 18 13 

One woman would another wed " 19 48 

Every one that flatters thee " 21 31 

If that one be prodigal " 21 39 

Had the essence but in one P T 26 

Keither two nor one " 40 

Seemeth this concordant one " 46 

Only — the only sovereign plaster V A 916 

Only he hath an eye R L 497 

will make thee only loved for fear " 610 

Only to flatter fools " 1559 

for she was only mine " 1798 

And only must be wail'd " 1799 

And only herald to the gaudy 

spring Son 1 10 

dearest and mine only care " 48 7 

their virtue only is their show " 54 9 

Though to itself it only live and die " 94 10 

render, only me for thee " 125 12 

Only my plague thus far " 141 13 

Onset — the onset still expecting R L 432 

But in the onset come Son 90 11 

Onward— Onward to Troy R L 1504 

My grief lies onward Son 50 14 

As thou goest onwards " 126 6 

Opal— sapphire and the opal blend L C 215 



Ope — it will not ope the gate VA 424 

But they must ope R L 383 

breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes " 445 

Open — thy lips shall never open V A 48 

course opens them again " 960 

But as they open RL 304 

the door he opens wide " 359 

.Till they might open " 399 

Open — with open listening ear " 283 

mark of every open eye " 520 

night's 'scapes doth open lay " 747 

turns to open shame " 890 

Lays open all the little worms " 1248 

keep my drooping eyelids open 

wide Son 27 7 

thy image should keep open " 61 1 

Open'd— Open'd their mouths V A 248 

ruby-colour'd portal open'd " 451 

And being open'd " 1051 

were open'd to the light R L 105 

Opinion — errors by opinion bred " 937 

Opportnnity— But ill-annex'd " 874 

O Opportunity, thy guilt is great " 876 

How comes it then, vile Opportunity " 895 

ne'er meet with Opportunity " 903 

thy servant Opportunity " 932 

In vain I rail at Opportunity " 1023 

Opposite — with their persuasion " 286 

Oppress'd — The weak oppress'd, the 

impression of strange kinds " 1242 

and night by day oppress'd Son 28 4 

oppress'd with melancholy " 45 8 

Oppression — When day's oppression 

is not eased " 28 3 

Oppressor— while the feeds R L 905 

Or — than doves or roses are V A 10 

or prey be gone " 58 

foul, or wrinkled-old " 133 

dissolve, or seem to melt " 144 

Or, like a fairy, trip " 146 

Or, like a nymph " 147 

Or what great danger " 206 

fair words, or else be mute " 208 

mountain or in dale " 232 

for curb or pricking spur " 285 

caparisons or trapping gay " 286 

whether he run or fly " 304 

stopp'd, or river stay'd " 331 

or ivory in an alabaster " 363 

or I had no hearing " 428 

Or were I deaf " 435 

Or as the wolf doth grin " 459 

Or as the berry breaks " 460 

Or like the deadly bullet " 461 

in earth or heaven " 493 

or in the ocean drench'd, or in the 

fire " 494 

or morn or weary even " 495 

delight to die, or life desire " 496 

Or being early pluck'd " 528 

Or as the fleet-foot roe " 561 

Or like the froward infant " 562 

Or at the fox " 675 

Or at the roe " 676 

Or theirs whose desperate hands " 765 

Or butcher-sire that reaves " 766 

Or 'stonish'd as night-wanderers " 825 

rough bear or lion proud " 884 

unwitnessed with eye or ear " 1023 



OR 



220 



OR 



Or— Or, as the snail VA 




1033 


grass, herb, leaf, or weed " 




1055 


or any thing ensuing " 




1078 


but high or low " 




1139 


Or why is Collatine It L 




33 


Or, gaining more " 




138 


one for all or all for one " 




144 


Or sells eternity " 




214 


Or what fond beggar " 




216 


my son or sire " 




232 


Or lain in ambush " 




233 


Or were he not " 




234 


revenge or quittal of such strife " 




236 


a sentence or an old man's saw " 




244 


for colour or excuses " 




267 


Or as those bars " 




327 


dazzleth them, or else some shame 






supposed " 




377 


'gainst law or duty " 




497 


Or stop the headlong fury " 




501 


slavish wipe or birth-hour's blot " 




537 


full-fed hound or gorged hawk " 




694 


tender smell or speedy flight " 




695 


slow pursuit, or altogether balk " 




696 


curb his heat, or rein his rash de- 






sire " 




706 


Or if thou wilt permit " 




775 


Or hateful cuckoos " 




849 


Or toads infect fair founts " 




850 


Or tyrant folly lurk " 




851 


Or kings be breakers " 




852 


Or kills his life or else his quality " 




875 


Or free that soul " 




900 


makes him honour'd or begets 






him hate " 




1005 


Or that which from discharged 






cannon fumes " 




1043 


Or one encompass'd " 




1151 


To live or die " 




1154 


' My body or my soul " 




1163 


drown their eyes or break their 






hearts " 




1239 


by force, by fraud, or skill " 




1243 


without or yea or no " 




1340 


Or blot with hell-born sin " 




1519 


As if with grief or travail " 




1543 


Or, at the least, this refuge " 




1654 


Or keep him from heart-easing " 




1782 


for daughter or for wife " 




1792 


help wounds, or grief help griev- 






ous deeds " 




1822 


Pity the world, or else this glut^ 






ton be Son 


1 


13 


Or who is he so fond " 


3 


7 


Or ten times happier " 


6 


8 


Or else receivest with pleasure " 


8 


4 


Or to thyself at least " 


10 


12 


live in thine or thee " 


10 


14 


of good or evil luck " 


14 


3 


of dearths, or seasons' quality " 


14 


4 


Or say with princes " 


14 


7 


Or else of thee " 


14 


13 


Time's pencil, or my pupil pen " 


16 


10 


chance or nature's changing course " 


18 


8 


men can breathe, or eyes can see " 


18 


13 


Or some fierce thing " 


23 


3 


birth, or wealth, or wit " 


37 


5 


Or any of these all, or all, or more " 


37 


6 


Or heart in love " 


47 


4 



Or — thy picture or my love Son 47 9 

Or, if they sleep " 47 13 

Or captain jewels in the caroanet " 52 8 

Or as the wardrobe " 52 10 

Or call it winter " 56 13 
Where you may be, or your affairs 

suppose " 57 10 

Or at your hand " 58 3 

be it well or ill " 58 14 
we are mended, or whether better 

they " 59 11 

Or whether revolution " 59 12 
Are vanishing or vanish'd out of 

sight " 63 7 

Or state itself confounded " 64 10 

Or what strong hand " 65 11 

Or who his spoil " 65 12 

Or durst inhabit on a living brow " 68 4 
Either not assail'd or victor being 

charged " 70 10 

yellow leaves, or none, or few " 73 2 

Or as sweet-season'd showers " 75 2 

Possessing or pursuing " 75 11 
what is had or must from you be 

took " 75 12 
Or gluttoning on all, or all away " 75 14 
variation or quick change " 7G 2 
Or, being wreck'd " 80 11 
Or I shall live "81 1 
Or you survive " 81 2 
I found, or thought I found " 83 3 
Or me, to whom thou gavest it " 87 10 
hawks or horses be " 91 11 
thy thoughts or thy heart's work- 
ings be " 93 11 
Or, if they sing " 97 13 
Or from their proud lap " 98 8 
But sweet or colour " 99 15 
my love, or thy dear merit " 108 4 
calls me well or ill " 112 3 
my steel'd sense or changes right 

or wrong "112 8 

Of bird, of flower, or shape " 113 6 

rudest or gentlest sight " 113 9 

favour or deformd'st creature " 113 10 
The mountain or the sea, the day 

or night " 113 11 

The crow or dove " 113 12 

Or whether doth my mind " 114 1 

Or whether shall I say "114 3 

Or bends with the remover "116 4 

brass or hammer'd steel " 120 4 

Or on my frailties " 121 7 

Or, at the least " 122 5 

Made more or less " 123 12 

Time's love or to Time's hate " 124 3 

weeds, or flowers with flowers " 124 4 

Or laid great bases " 125 3 

than waste or ruining " 125 4 

Or if it were " 127 2 

Or mine eyes seeing " 137 11 

Or, if it do " 142 5 

Or, if they have " 148 3 

Or made them swear " 152 12 

Or monarch's hands L C 41 

as it was, or best without " 98 

Or he his manage " 112 

in thoughts, or to remain " 129 

Or forced examples " 157 



OR 



221 



OUR 



Or— Or my affection put L C 192 

Or any of my leisures " 193 

smiled or made some moan " 217 

Or sister sanctified " 233 

blushes, or of weeping water " 304 

Or swoundiug paleness " 303 

Or to turn while " 308 

Or he refused to take P P 4 10 

a lover, or a lecher whether " 7 17 

are seld or never found " 13 7 

In scorn or friendship " 14 8 

or kill the gallant knight " 16 6 

That are either true or fair P T 66 

Orator — the orator too green V A 806 

of men without an orator R L 30 

All orators are dumb " 268 

The orator, to deck his oratory " 815 

Oratory — to her .... adds more grace " 564 

The orator, to deck his oratory " 815 

Orb— In the small orb X C 289 

Orbed— To the orbed earth " 25 

Orchard — in others' orchards grew " 171 

Ordering- — in each by mutual .... Son 8 10 

Orient — an orient drop beside V A 981 

in the orient when the gracious 

light Son 7 1 

Bright orient pearl P P 10 3 

Origin — my origin and ender L C 222 

Ornament — our mistress' ornaments 

are chaste R L 322 

the world's fresh ornament Son 1 9 

for ornament doth use " 21 3 

By that sweet ornament " 54 2 

Without all ornament " 68 10 

The ornament of beauty " 70 3 

profaned their scarlet ornaments " 142 6 

ajjpertainings and to ornaments L C 115 

Orplian — The orphan pines while 

the oppressor feeds R L 905 

But hope of orphans Son 97 10 
Orpheus — Pluto winks while Orph- 
eus plays R L 

Orts— a beggar's orts to crave " 

Osier — to thee like osiers bowed RP 5 
Under an osier growing by a brook " 6 



Other — Under her other was V A 

each other did destroy " 

Her other tender hand " 

His other agents aim " 

feeder of the other four " 

may they kiss each other " 

with others being mingled " 

others, they think " 

as thou dost lend to other " 

all other eyes to see " 

view'd each other's sorrow " 

The other kills thee quickly " 

some other in their bills " 

was the other queen R L 

interchange each other's seat " 

th' other feareth harm " 

her other fair hand was " 

no other pleasure of his gain " 

tames the one ; the other wild " . 

Will slay the other " , 

the other made divine " 

the other being dead " 

the other takes in hand " 

to guess at others' smart " 



553 

985 

4 

5 

32 

346 

352 

400 

446 

505 

691 

843 

864 

952 

963 

990 

1102 

66 

70 

172 

393 

860 

1097 

1162 

1164 

1187 

1235 

1238 



Other— while others saucily RL 1348 

surmise of others' detriuiont " 1579 

their dolour others have endured " 1582 

his lord and other company " 1584 

wondering each other's chance " 1596 

call her his, the other liis " 1793 

love toward others Son 9 13 

they see others grow " 12 12 

to some other give " 13 4 

the other to complain " 28 7 

Both find each other " 42 11 

The other two " 45 1 

tlie other my desire " 45 3 
doth good turns now unto the 

other " 47 2 

The other as your bounty " 53 11 

with others all too near " 61 14 

As I all other " 62 8 

In other accents " 69 7 

In others' works ■ " 78 11 

When others would give " 83 12 

whilst other write good words " 85 5 

Then others for the breath " 85 13 

When other petty griefs " 90 10 

And other strains of woe " 90 13 

thy heart in other place " 93 4 

Who, moving others " 94 3 

Others but stewards " 94 8 

For to no other pass " 103 11 

varying to other words " 105 10 

Of others' voices " 112 10 

but by others' seeing " 121 4 
shovild others' false adulterate eye " 121 5 

forfeit, so that other mine " 134 3 

Shall will in others " 135 7 

Eobb'd others' beds' revenues " 142 8 

what others do abhor " 150 11 

With others thou shouldst '• 150 12 

must curb it upon others' proof L C 163 

in others' orchards grew " 171 

thou lovest the one and I the other P P 8 4 

other help for him " 18 54 

Either was the other's mine P T 36 

Our— our sport is not in sight V A 124 

by our ears our hearts oft tainted 

be R L 38 

our mistress' ornaments are chaste " 322 

from forth a cloud, bereaves our 

sight " 373 

that we call them ours " 868 

that we can say is ours " 873 

Shall tune our heart-strings " 1141 

from our house in grief " 1308 

and they are none of ours " 1757 

To rouse our Roman gods " 1831 

By our strong ax-ms " 1834 

By all our country rights " 1838 

Our undivided loves are one Son 36 2 

In our two loves " 36 5 

Though in our lives " 36 6 

And our dear love " 39 6 

how are bur brains beguiled " 59 2 

So do our minutes hasten " 60 2 

of our old acquaintance tell " 89 12 

Our love was new " 102 5 

Of this our time " 106 10 

to make our appetites more keen " 118 1 

we our palate urge " 118 2 

to prevent our maladies " 118 3 



OUR 



222 



OWEST 



Our— 0, that our night of woe Son 120 9 

Not by our feeling " 121 4 

Our dates are brief " 123 5 

make them born to our desire " 123 7 

inviting time our fashion calls " 124 8 

And in our faults " 138 14 

to make our wits more keen L C 161 

satisfaction to our blood " 162 

that preach in our behoof " 165 

our drops this difference bore " 300 

Since that our faults P P 1 14 

All our pleasure known " 18 45 

All our merry meetings " 18 46 

All our evening sport " 18 47 

All our love is lost " 18 48 

'Mongst our mourners P T 20 

Out— In limning out VA 290 

Things out of hope " 567 

the cold fault cleanly out " 694 

Their light blown out " 826 

volleys out his voice " 921 

lo, two lamps burn out " 1128 

and wore out the night R L 123 

' Fair torch, burn out thy light " 190 

The eye of heaven is out " 356 

to heave the owner out " 413 

Small lights are soon blown out " 647 

halt, creep, cry out for thee " 902 

' Out, idle words, servants to shal- 
low fools , " 1016 

And seems to point her out " 1087 

Will we find out " 1146 

tread the way out readily " 1152 

pattern of the worn-out age " 1350 

burnt out in tedious nights " 1379 

scratch out the angry eyes " 1469 

rings out the doleful knell " 1495 

would be drawn out too long " 1616 

What he breathes out " 1666 

In rage sent out " 1671 

wear their brave state out Son 15 8 

prick'd thee out for women's 

pleasure " 20 13 

But, out, alack ! he was but one 

hour mine " 33 11 

root out the work of masonry " 55 6 

wear this world out " 55 12 

To find out shames " 61 7 

or vanish'd out of sight " 63 7 

summer's honey breath hold out " 65 5 
To linger out a purposed overthrow " 90 8 
habitation chose out thee " 95 10 

leaves out difference " 105 8 

but effectually is out "113 4 

But bears it out even to the edge " 116 12 
out of their spheres been fitted "119 7 
flre my good one out " 144 14 

doth point out thee " 151 9 

love put out Religion's eye L C 250 

flre my good one out P P 2 14 

She burned out love " 7 14 

Out-bragg'd — Whose bare .... the 

web it seem'd to wear L C 95 

Out-brave— out-braves his dignity Son 94 12 
Out-bnrneth — as soon as straw .... P P 7 14 
Outcast — beweep my outcast state Son 29 2 

Outcry — Entombs her outcry RL 679 

Outfit cing — Outfacing faults in love P P 1 8 
Out-going — out-going in thy noon Son 7 13 



Outlive — to outlive long date Son 38 12 

outlive this powerful rhyme " 55 2 

much outlive a gilded tomb " 101 11 

Outrage — darest do such outrage B L 605 

Outrageous — no outrageous thing " 607 

Outright— Kill me with looks Son 139 14 

Outrun — How he outruns the wind V A 681 

'Outruns the eye RL 1667 

Out-stripp'd — they be out-stripp'd 

by every pen Son 32 

Out-stripping— Out-stripping crows F4 324 

Outward — puts on ... . strangeness " 310 

thy outward parts would move " 435 

no outward harm express'd R L 91 

With outward honesty " 1545 

inward worth nor outward fair Son 16 11 
mine eye's due is thine outward 

part " 46 13 

outward thus with outward praise " 69 5 

Where time and outward form " 108 14 

the outward honouring " 125 2 

Painting thy outward walls " 146 4 

outwards so commended L C 80 

with an outward show P P 19 38 

Outwardly — but fighting outwardly L C 203 

Outwore— and outwore the night V A 841 

Outworn — death by time outworn R L 1761 

of outworn buried age Son 64 2 

the map of days outworn " 68 1 

Oven — An oven that is stopp'd V A 331 

Over — Over one arm the lusty " 31 

Over my altars hath he " 103 

0, had she then gave over " 571 

Over one shoulder doth she " 1058 

sovereign mistress over wrack Son 126 5 

sorrow over me hath power L C 74 

eyes stuck over all his face " 81 

Overcome — Who, .... by doubt VA 891 

Overcome, as one " 955 

Overflow — will force it overflow " 72 

Over-fly — strive to over-fly them " 324 

Over-go — That over-goes my blunt 

invention Son 103 7 
Over - handled — your idle over- 
handled theme V A 770 

Overlook — did hotly overlook them " 178 

Over-partifil — corrupt by ... . looks Son 137 5 

Overplus — and ' Will ' in overplus " 135 2 

Overruled— Thus he that VA 109 

Oversee — shalt oversee this will B L 1205 

Overseen — How was I overseen "' 1206 

Over-shoot — to .... his troubles VA 680 

Over-slipp'd — hath over-slipp'd her 

thought R L 1576 

Oversway'd — overruled I . . . . V A 109 

Overthrow — Till mutual overthrow " 1018 

a purposed overthrow Son 90 8 

Overturn — war shall statues overturn " 55 5 

Over-wash'd — cheeks .... with woe R L 1225 

Owe — and I will not owe it V A 411 

if any love you owe me " 523 

which Collatine doth owe R L 82 

more slavish tribute than they owe " 299 

kingdoms of hearts shouldst owe Son 70 14 

Since what he owes thee " 79 14 

landlord which doth owe them L C 140 

Owed — I owed her, and 'tis mine R L 1803 

borrow'd motion seeming owed L C 327 

Owest — of that fair thou owest Son 18 10 



OWL 



223 



PAINTING 



Owl— The owl, night's herald VA 531 

No noise but owls' and wolves' R L 1(55 

that this night-owl will catch " 360 

Own — The kiss shall be thine own VA 117 

Is thine own heart to thine own 

face " 157 

Steal thine own freedom " 160 

by their own direction " 216 

in thine own law forlorn " 251 

more moving than your own " 776 

because it is his own R L 35 

but she is not her own " 241 

blush at her own disgrace " 479 

not their own infamy " 539 

for thine own sake leave me " 583 

Their own transgressions " 634 

That from their own misdeeds " 637 

Till with her own white fleece " 678 

can see his own abomination " 704 

breakers of their own behests " 852 

At his own shadow " 997 

are their own faults' books " 1253 

mine own would do me good " 1274 

her own gross abuse " 1315 

with his own weight goes " 1494 

the feeling of her own grief " 1578 

to make mine own excuse " 1653 

Thine, mine, his own " 1684 

thine own bright eyes Son 1 5 

Within thine own bud " 1 11 

thine own deep-sunken eyes "27 

by your own sweet skill " 16 14 

her own sweet brood " 19 2 

Nature's own hand " 20 1 

weakens his own heart " 23 4 

mine own love's strength " 23 7 

mine own love's might " 23 8 

Thine own sweet argument " 38 3 
mine own praise to mine own self 

bring " 39 3 

mine own when I praise " 39 4 

of mine own desert " 49 10 

Mine own true love " 61 11 

mine own worth do define " 62 7 

Mine own self-love " 62 11 

give thee so thine own " 69 6 

than mine own desert " 72 6 

thy own worth then not knowing " 87 9 

With mine own weakness " 88 5 

Your own glass shows " 103 14 

Not mine own fears " 107 1 

Mock their own presage " 107 6 

Gored mine own thoughts " 110 3 

his own vision holds " 113 8 

your own dear-purchased right " 117 6 

reckon up their own " 121 10 

thou thine own state " 142 3 

Love's own hand did make " 145 1 

Ask'd their own wills L C 133 

was my own fee-simple " 144 

'gainst her own content " 157 

but mine own was free " 195 

to your own command " 227 

Made me think upon mine own P P 21 ' 18 

Owner — beauty, in the owners' arms i2 i 27 

From this fair throne to heave 

the owner out " 413 

and owners of their faces Son 94 7 

The owner's tongue doth publish " 102 4 



Pace— colour, pace, and bone V A 294 

knit brow and strengthless pace R L 709 

marching on with trembling paces " 1391 

with my desire keep pace Son 51 9 
and no pace perceived " 104 10 
Pace— Shall you pace forth " 55 10 
Pack — Pack night, peep day P P 15 17 
Pack'd— The night so pack'd, I post " 15 8 
Pack-horse — sin's pack-horse, vir- 
tue's snare R L 928 

Page— wait on them as their pages " 910 

antiquity for aye his page Son 108 12 

Paid — as if not paid before " 30 12 

Pain— in his shelly cave with pain V A 1034 

Fain pays the income R L 334 

joy breeds months of pain " 690 

living death and pain perpetual " 726 

perplex'd in greater pain " 733 

have co-partners in my pain " 789 

it cannot cure his pain " 861 

The pain be mine Son 38 14 

with pretty ruth upon my pain " 132 4 
and rid my pain " 139 14 

The manner of my pity-wanting 

pain "140 4 

she that makes me sin awards me 

pain • " 141 14 

painting pain and cost P P 13 12 

As take the pain " 14 12 

more mickle was the pain " 16 9 

None takes pity on thy pain " 21 20 

Pained — ease to the pained R L 901 

Painful — gouts and painfal fits " 856 

More feeling-painful " 1679 

The painful warrior famoused Son 25 9 

Paint — ground of sin I will not . ... R L 1074 

Painted— Well-painted idol V A 212 

deceived with painted grapes " 601 

Shall by a painted cloth R L 245 

To this well-painted piece " 1443 

in Priam's painted wound " 1466 

she weeps Troy's painted woes " 1492 

Sinon here is painted " 1541 

That she with painted images " 1577 

than your painted counterfeit Son 16 8 
with Nature's own hand painted " 20 1 
Stirr'd by a painted beauty " 21 2 

And to the painted banquet " 47 6 

in Grecian tires are painted new " 53 8 

Painter — Look, when a painter V A 289 

Which the conceited painter drew 

so proud RL 1871 

to show the painter's strife " 1377 

and there the painter interlaces " 1390 

the painter was so nice " 1412 

In her the painter had anatomized " 1450 

The painter was no god " 1461 

In him the painter labour'd " 1506 

And chid the painter " 1528 

Mine eye hath play'd the painter Son 24 1 
it is best painter's art " 24 4 

For through the painter " 24 5 

Painting— Of skilful painting R L 1367 

about the painting round " 1499 

Painting my age with beauty Son 62 14 
Why should false painting imitate " 67 5 
And their gross painting " 82 13 

that you did painting need " 83 1 

to your fair no painting set " 83 2 



PAINTING 



224 



PARTING 



Painting — Painting thy outward 

walls Son 146 4 

painting pain and cost P P 13 12 

Pair — A pair of maiden worlds R L 408 

one pair of weeping eyes " 1680 

Palate — And to liis palate doth pre- 
pare Son 114 12 
we our palate urge " 118 2 

The one a palate hath L C 167 

Pale — Making them red and pale V A 21 

shame and anger ashy-pale " 76 

But now her cheek was pale " 347 

Claps her pale cheek " 468 

whereat a sadden pale " 589 

agues pale and faint " 739 

With cold-pale weakness numbs " 892 

and they are pale " l]23 

Eesembling well his pale cheeks " 1169 

Which in pale embers hid R L 5 

Here pale with fear " 183 

round turrets destitute and pale " 441 

anger makes the lily pale " 478 

Pale cowards marching on " 1391 

Cheeks neither red nor pale " 1510 

Nor ashy-pale the fear " 1512 

And now this pale swan " 1611 

From lips new-waxen pale " 1663 

the pale fear in his face " 1775 

Gilding pale streams Son 33 4 

That leaves look pale " 97 14 

a fickle maid full pale L C 5 

her pale and pined cheek " 32 

A lily pale with damask dye P P 1 5 

Pale — Within the circuit of this 

ivory pale V A 230 

Paled— Of paled pearls and rubies L C 198 

Pale-faced— like a coward VA 569 

Paleness — Or swounding paleness " 305 

Paler— Paler for sorrow P P 9 3 

Palfrey— how to get my palfrey " 384 

Thy palfrey, as he should " 385 

Palm — on his sweating palm " 25 

Would in thy pahn dissolve " 144 

Palmer — As palmers' chat makes 

short their pilgrimage RL 791 

Pandiou— King Pandion he is dead PP 21 23 
Pang— in the suflf'ering pangs it 

bears L C 272 

Pant — My boding heart pants V A 647 

Panteth — the weak mouse jjanteth R L 555 

Panting— Panting he lies V A 62 

wearied lamb lies panting there B L 737 

Paper— paper, ink, and pen . " 1289 

o'er the paper with her quill " 1297 

So should my papers Son 17 9 

For every vulgar paper " 38 4 

Tearing of papers, breaking L C 6 

Paplios — Holding their course to. ... 1^4 1193 

Paradise — thinks in .... was sown L C 91 

to win a Paradise PP 3 14 
Parallel— And delves the parallels Son 60 10 
Parasite— sounds resembling para- 
sites VA 848 

Parcel— their silken parcels hurls L C 87 

Their distract parcels in combined 

sums " 231 

Parching — not parching heat nor 

freezing cold R L 1145 

Pardon — Yet pardon me VA 998 



Pardon — Yourself to pardon Son 58 12 

' "O, pardon me, in that my boast L C 240 

I pardon crave of thee P P 10 11 

Paris— Thy heat of lust, fond Paris R L 1473 

Park— I'll be a park VA 201 

I am such a park " 239 

Parley — parley to his heartless foe R L 471 

Parling— from their parting looks " 100 

Part— thyoutwardpartswouldmoveF^ 435 

Each part in me " 436 

numbs each feeling part " 892 

This mutiny each part doth so sur- 
prise " 1049 

My part is youth R L 298 

corrupted takes the worser part " 294 

against a thorn thou bear'st thy part " 1135 

every part a part of woe " 1327 

'Tis but a part of sorrow " 1323 

help to bear thy part " 1830 

In singleness the parts that thou Son 8 8 

shows not half your parts " 17 4 

put besides his part " 23 2 

all love's loving parts " 31 3 

all their parts of me " 31 11 

in thy parts do crowned sit " 37 7 

by a part of all thy glory live " 37 12 

the better part of me " 39 2 
eye's moiety and the dear heart's 

part " 46 12 
mine eye's due is thine outward 

part " 46 13 

love doth share a part " 47 8 
To guard the lawful reasons on 

thy part " 49 12 

you have some part " 53 13 

and all my every part " 62 2 

Those parts of thee " 69 1 

The very part was consecrate " 74 6 

the better part of me " 74 8 

each part will be forgotten " 81 4 

Upon thy part " 88 6 

hath the mind no part " 113 7 

oblivion yield his part " 122 7 

like in every part " 132 12 

And play the mother's part " 143 12 
My nobler part to my gross body's 

treason " 151 6 

And when in his fair parts L C 83 

my own fee-simple not in part " 144 

My parts had power to charm " 260 

that I thy parts admire P P 5 10 

He with thee doth bear a part " 21 56 

Pari — with wringing; let us part VA 421 

Do summon us to part " 534 

As fearful of him, part; through " 630 

seems to part in sunder R L 388 

thou mayst come and part Son 48 12 

Which parts the shore " 56 10 

Doth part his function " 113 . 3 

If what parts can so remain P T 48 

Partake — against myself with thee 

partake Son 149 . 2 

Partial — corrupt by over- partial 

looks " 137 5 

As well as fancy, partial wight P P 19 4 

Partially — partially they smother R L 634 

Particular — But these particulars Son 91 7 

of one particular tear L C 289 

Parting — The honey fee of parting V A 538 



PARTING 



225 



PELLETED 



Partiii!?— Yet at ray parting FPU 7 

Partly— and is partly blind Son 113 3 

Partner— To be thy partner 'R L 672 

Party— Thy adverse party Hon 35 10 

Wher6 neither party L C 186 

Pass— as scorning it should pass VA 9S2 

when thou shalt strangely pass Hon 49 5 

For to no other pass " 103 11 

let me pass untold " 136 9 
he should not pass these grounds P P 9 8 

Passag'e — did honey passage yield VA 452 

Struggling for passage " 1047 

for passage of her breath R L 1040 

All unseen 'gan passage find P P 11 6 

Pass'd — Thou hast pass'd by Son 70 9 

you've pass'd a hell of time " 120 6 

Passenger — . ... in summer's heat V A 91 

Passing — straight legs and .... strong " 297 

As passing all conceit P P 8 8 

Spied a blossom passing fair " 17 3 

Passing-bell— that hears the VA 702 

Passion — trembling in her passion " 27 

swelling passion doth provoke " 218 

Passion on passion deeply is re- 
doubled " 832 

Variable passions throng " 967 

each passion labours so " 969 

her passion's strength renews R L 1103 

life and feeling of her passion " 1317 

such passion her assails " 1562 

too sensible thy passion maketh " 1678 

the master-mistress of my passion Son 20 2 

Catching all passions L C 126 

their passions likewise lent me " 199 

For, lo, his passion, but an art " 295 

Passion — Dumbly she passions V A 1059 

Past — My day's delight is past " 380 

past reason's weak removing RL 243 

To all sins past " 923 

is past the help of law " 1022 

recall'd in rage being past " 1671 

From what is past " 1685 

the violet past prime Son 12 3 

remembrance of things past " 30 2 

a limit past my praise " 82 6 

at the present nor the past " 123 10 

Past reason hunted " 129 6 

Past reason hated " 129 7 

my days are past the best " 138 6 
Past cure I am, now reason is past 

care " 147 9 

To put the by-past perils L C 158 

my years be past the best P P 1 6 
Patent — so my patent back again is 

swerving Son 87 8 

Path— The path is smooth VA 788 

She treads the path " 908 

Patience — Where thou with ... . RL 486 

with greater patience bear it " 1158 

By this, mild patience " 1268 

Patience seem'd to scorn " 1505 

That patience is quite beaten " 1563 

And patience, tame to sufferance Son 58 7 

My tongue-tied patience " 140 2 
Patient— The patient dies while the 

physician sleeps R L 904 

"Whilst, like a willing patient Son 111 9 

Playing patient sports L C 242 

Patiently— unless I took all ... . R L 1641 

15 



Patron— god and patron of all light VA 860 

Pattern — Even so this pattern R L IojO 

beauty's pattern to succeeding men (Sara 19 12 
you pattern of all those " 98 12 

patterns of this foul beguiling L C 170 

Pattern'd- When by thy fault R L 629 

Pause — Then mightst thou pause V A 137 

doth provoke a pause " 218 

Sad pause and deep regard R L 277 

and makes a pause " 541 

Pausing — Pausing for means to 

mourn " 1365 

Paw — blunt thou the lion's paws Son 19 1 

Pawn'd — Pawn'd honest looks RL 1351 

Pawning — Pawning his honour " 156 

Pay — one sweet kiss shall pay V A 84 

So thou wilt buy, and pay " 514 

pay them at thy leisure " 518 

Love's eyes pay tributary gazes " 632 

every minute pays the hour R L 329 

Pain pays the income " 334 

streams that pay a daily debt " 649 

those that pay the willing loan Son 6 6 
Which I new pay as if not paid " ."0 12 
and pays it thee again " 79 8 

thou thyself dost pay " 79 14 

He pays the whole " 134 14 

Pay — her lips were ready for his pay V A 89 

Paying — Paying what ransom " 550 

by paying too much rent Son 125 6 

Paying more slavish tribute R L 229 

Payment — Say, for non-payment V A 521 

With such black payment R L 576 

Peace — How he in peace is wounded " 831 

'0 peace!' quoth Lucrece " 1284 

And for the peace of you Son 75 3 

And peace proclaims " 107 8 

Love's arms are peace L C 271 

Peaceful — And in i, peaceful hour V A 652 

Pearl — like pearls in ^lass " 980 

And wiped the brim, h jwarl R L 1213 

Those round clear pea. Is " 1553 

Ah, but those tears are ^-earl Son 34 13 

Of paled pearls and ruble;: L C 198 

Bright orient pearl P P 10 3 

Pearly— With pearly sweat R L 396 

Peasant — Which heartless peasants " 1.392 

Pebbled — waves make towards the 

pebbled shore Son 60 1 

Peculiar — did him peculiar duties R L 14 

Peel'd— the bark peel'd from the 

lofty pine " 1167 

her bark being peel'd away " 1169 

Peep — the gaudy sun would peep V A 1083 

should not peep again R L 788 

each little mote will peep " 1251 

Delights to peep Son 24 12 

Pack night, peep day P P 15 17 

Peep'd — Some beauty peep'd L C 14 

Peeping— leave thy peeping R L 1089 

Nymphs back peeping P P 18 43 

peeping forth this tumult R L 447 

Peer— peer to such a peerless dame " 21 

o'er the white sheet peers her 

whiter chin " 472 

Peering — peering through a wave VA 86 

Peerless — peer to such a . . . . dame R L 21 

Pelf— but cannot pluck the pelf P P 14 12 
Pelleted — woe had pelleted in tears L C 13 



PELT 



226 



PICTURE 



Pelt — seems to pelt and swear RL WIS 

Pen — paper, ink, and pen " 1289 

Time's pencil, or my pupil pen Son 16 10 

with thine antique pen " 19 10 

they be outstripp'd by every pen " 32 6 

as every alien pen " 78 3 

travairof a worthier pen " 79 6 

such virtue hath my pen " 81 13 

within that pen doth dwell " 84 5 

of well refined pen " 85 8 

And gives thy pen " 100 8 

I see their antique pen " 106 7 

Pen — He pens her piteous clamours R L 681 

Penance — Nor double penance, to 

correct correction Son 111 12 

Pencil — Time's , or my pupil pen " 16 10 

Beauty no pencil, beauty's truth " 101 7 

Pencill'd — To pencill'd pensiveness J? i 1497 

Penetrable — No penetrable entrance " 559 

Penn'd — sadly penn'd in blood L C 47 

Pensived— Of pensived and subdued 

desires " 219 

Pensiveness— To pencill'd .... R L 1497 

Pent — pent in walls of glass Son 5 10 

for I, being pent in thee " 133 13 

Penury — Lean within that pen " 84 5 

People — poor people are amazed VA 925 

a press of peoi)le at a door R L 1301 

Perceive — I perceive the reason V A 727 

When I perceive that men Son 15 5 

Perceived — and no pace perceived " 104 10 

Perceivest — This thou perceivest Son 73 13 

Perceiving — perceiving how he is 

enraged V A 317 

Perchance — Perchance his boast R L 36 

Perchance that envy " 39 

Perfect— And once made perfect V A 408 

The perfect ceremony Son 23 6 

every bad a perfect best " 114 7 

whose perfect white R L 394 

Perfect'st— of love being made Son 51 10 

Perfection— Whose full perfection V A 684 

And pure perfection " 736 

Have no perfection R L 837 

But no perfection is so absolute " 853 

Holds in perfection So7i 15 2 
And right perfection wrongfully 

disgraced " 66 7 

Perforce — Perforce will force it V A 72 

thou perforce must bear R L 612 

Perforce am thine Son 133 14 

Perfume — Three April perfumes " 104 7 

And in some perfumes " 130 7 

Perfumed — Comes breath perfumed VA 444 

As the perfumed tincture Son 54 6 

Perliaps — When I perhaps com- 
pounded am with clay " 71 10 

Peril — To put the by-past perils L C 158 

Period — had they seen the period 

of their ill R L 380 

She puts the period " 565 

Perish— so my Troy did perish " 1547 

rude, barrenly perish Son 11 10 

Perjnred— For perjured Sinon R L 1521 

Is perjured, murderous Son 129 3 

I am perjured most " 152 6 

sworn thee fair ; more perjured I " 152 13 

Perjury — Guilty of perjury R L 919 

craft and perjury should thrust " 1517 



Perjury— to this false perjury PP 3 3 

Permit— permit the sun to climb R L 775 

permit the basest clouds Son 33 5 

Perpetual— death and pain .... R L 726 

and make perpetual night " 784 

and thy perpetual infamy " 1638 

with a perpetual dullness Son 56 8 

took heat perpetual " 154 10 

Perpetually— drop on them RL 686 

Perplexed — in his throne VA 1043 

perplex'd in greater pain RL 733 

Person — Health to thy person " 1305 

And set thy person forth P P 19 12 

Personal — In personal duty L C 130 

Perspective — perspective it is best 

painter's art Son 24 4 

Persuade — to persuade him there V A 1114 

doth of itself persuade R L 29 

persuade him to abstaining " 130 

My glass shall not persuade me Son 22 1 
Persuade my heart PP 3 3 
Persuasion — with their opposite per- 
suasion R L 286 

Perusal— Worthy perusal stand Son 38 6 

Perused — she advisedly perused R L 1527 

Which she perused L C 44 

Perverse— Perverse it shall be VA 1157 

Pervert — And new pervert L C 329 

Pestilence— Life-ijoisoning VA 740 

Petitioners — petitioners to his eyes " 356 

Petty — such petty bondage " 394 

the petty streams that pay R L 649 

If all these petty ills " 656 

When other petty griefs Son 90 10 
Philomel — lamenting Philomel had 

ended R L 1079 

Come, Philomel, that sing'st " 1128 

Pliilomel on summer's front Son 102 7 
Philomela — While Philomela sits 

and sings P P 15 5 

Phcpbus— That Phcebus' lute " 8 10 

Phoenix — turn the long-lived .... Son 19 4 

His phffiuix down began L C 93 

Phcenix and the turtle fled P T 23 

Flaming in the phcenix' sight " 35 

To the phoenix and the dove " 50 

Death is now the phosnix' nest " 56 

Phrase — And precious phrase Son 85 4 

Phraseless — that phraseless hand L C 225 

Phrygian — to sheplierds lent R L 1.502 

Physic— Give physic to the sick " 901 

give physic to my grief Son 34 9 

which physic did except " 147 8 

to physic your cold breast L C 259 

In spite of physic P P 13 12 

Physician— while the sleeps R L 904 

from their physicians know Son 140 8 

the physician to my love " 147 5 

Physiognomy- Of might one R L 1395 

Pick— picks them all at last VA 576 

Could pick no meaning R L 100 

Picture— Fie, lifeless picture VA 211 

picture of an angry-chafing boar " 662 

tlie picture of true piety R Ij 542 

This picture she advisedly perused '' 1527 

the picture was belied " 1533 

thy picture's sight would bar Son 46 3 

With my love's picture " 47 5 

by thy picture or my love " 47 9 



PICTURE 



227 



PLAIT 



Picture — thy picture in ray sight Son 47 13 

that (lid his picture get L C 13-1 

Pictured — your true image .... lies Son 24 6 

Piece — where hangs a piece R L 1366 

To this well-painted piece " 1443 

Pieced — Pieced not his grace L C 119 

Pied — When proud-pied April Son 98 2 

Pierced — A closet never pierced " 46 6 

Piercing — with thy piercing light R L 1091 

Piety — the picture of true piety " 542 

Pike— Of hristly pikes VA 620 

Pilgrimaafe— makes short their .... R L 791 

mischief in thy pilgrimage " 960 

Attending on his golden pilgrim- 
age Son 7 8 
a zealous pilgrimage to thee " 27 6 

Pilla!?e — slaves for pillage fighting R L 428 

Pillow— Cozening the pillow " 387 

and on that pillow lay " 1620 

Pilot— Desire my pilot is " 279 

Pine — surfeit by the eye and pine 

the maw VA 602 

alone must sit and pine R L 795 

The orphan pines while the op- 
pressor feeds " 905 

He ten times pines, that pines be- 
holding " 1115 

Thus do I pine and surfeit Son 75 13 

Why dost thou pine " 146 3 

And let that pine to aggravate " 146 10 

with bleeding groans they pine L C 275 

Pine — peel'd from the lofty pine R L 1167 

Pined — pale and pined cheek beside L C 32 

Pinetli — he pineth still for more R L 98 

Pining — like still-jDining Tantalus " 858 

Pioner — you see the labouring pioner " 1380 

Pipe — those shrunk pipes had fed " 1455 

And stops her pipe in growth of Son 102 8 

My shepherd's pipe can sound P P 18 27 
Pirate— strong pirates, shelves, and 

sands R L 335 

Pit — these round enchanting pits VA 247 

Pitch — doth pitch the price " 551 

when from highmost pitch Son 7 9 

Above a mortal pitch " 86 6 

Pitcli'd— His high-pitch'd thoughts iZi 41 

Pitchy — merciless and pitchy night V A 821 

pitchy vapours from their biding R L 550 

Piteous — But for thy piteous lips V A 504 

pens her piteous clamours R, L 681 

piteous looks to Phrygian shep- 
herds lent " 1502 

Pith— The precedent of pith VA 26 

Pitied — may deserve to pitied be Son 142 12 
Pitiful — bechance him pitiful mis- 
chances RL 976 

Pitiful thrivers, in their gazing Son 125 8 

Pity — ' 0, pity,' 'gan she cry V A 95 

' Pity,' she cries, ' some favour " 257 

For pity now she can no more de- 
tain him " 577 

Which knows no pity " 1000 

in pity of his tender years " 1091 

more rage and lesser pity R L 468 

Soft pity enters at an iron gate " 595 

pearls of his that move thy pity " 1553 

your pity is enough to cure me Son 111 14 

Your love and pity " 112 1 

And suit thy pity " 132 12 



Pity— Root pity in thy heart Son 142 11 

Thy pity may deserve " 142 12 
Have of my suffering youth some 

feeling pity L C 178 

That to hear it was great pity P P 21 12 

None takes pity on thy pain " 21 20 

Pity but he were a king " 21 42 

Pity — see thy state and pity mine R L ...'.. 644 

but pity not his moans " 977 

Pity the world, or else Son 1 13 

Pity me then and wish "111 8 

Pity me then, dear friend " 111 13 

None alive will pity me P P 21 28 

Pitying — as pitying Lucreee' woes R L 1747 

and they, as pitying me Son 132 1 

Pity-pleading — Her eyes R L 561 

Pity-ivanting— of my pain Son 140 4 

Place — remaineth in one place V A 885 

she falleth in the place " 1121 

vents and crannies of the place R L 310 

the period often from his place " 565 

possession of thy gloomy place " 803 

shot from their fixed places " 1525 

and, as it left the place " 1735 

to weep upon the tainted place " 1746 

give his sorrow place " 1773 

treasure thou some place Son 6 3 

Shifts but his place " 9 10 

the place where he would be " 44 8 

Each changing place " 60 3 

doth give another place " 79 4 

thy heart in other place " 93 4 
Nor gives to necessary wrinkles 

place "108 11 

in my judgement's place " 131 12 

the wide world's common place " 137 10 

To every place at once L C 27 

and made him her place " 82 

made fairer by their place " 117 

Playing the place " 241 

and consecrations giving place " 20,'^ 

gave the tempter place " 318 

Place — do I mean to place him R L 517 

And place my merit Son 88 2 

Placed — they thinly placed are " 52 7 

a nay is iilaced without remove P P 18 12 

Plague — the plague is banish'd V A 510 

Become the public plague R L 1479 

of plagues, of dearths, or seasons Son 14 4 

Drink up the monarch's plague " 114 i 2 

And to this false plague " 137 14 

Only my plague thus far " 141 13 

Plague — To plague a private sin RL 1484 

Plagued — Is plagued with cramps " 856 

Plain— high delightful plain VA 236 

like a goodly champaign plain R L 1247 

All our merry meetings on the 

plains PP 18 46 

Plain — had his acts made plain VA 359 

the lesson is but plain " 407 

in his plain face slie spied R L 1532 

' Tarquin ' was pronounced plain " 1786 

In true plain words Son 82 12 

Plaining — entrance to her plaining P i 559 

Plainly — But plainly say thou lov'st 

her PP 19 11 

Plaint — That she her plaints R L 1364 

Plaintful— A plaintful story L C 2 

Plait — in plaits of majesty R L 93 



PLANT 



228 



POETRY 



Plant — sappy plants to bear VA 165 

that men as plants increase Son 15 5 

Heard where his plants L O 171 

Green plants bring not P P 18 39 

Trees did grow andplantsdid spring " 21 6 

Plantest— Thou plantest scandal P L 887 

Planting: — Planting oblivion, beat- 
ing reason back VA 557 

Plaster — the only sovereign plaster " 916 

Plat— nor tied in formal plat L C 29 

Platted — a platted hive of straw " 8 

PlausHily — did give consent P L ..... 1554 

Play— all this dumb play VA 359 

Play— Be bold to play " 124 

Play with his locks " 1090 

Pluto winks while Orpheus plays P L 553 

Will play the tyrants Son 5 3 

and play as wantonly " 54 7 

To play the watchman " 61 12 

I witli these did play " 98 14 

And play the mother's part " 143 12 

Plays not at all, but seems afraid P P 18 30 

Play'd — play'd with her breath P L ..... 400 

Mine eye hath play'd Son 24 1 

that wont to have play'd PP 18 29 

Play'st — thou, my music, music .... Son 128 1 

Playiiijf — Playing the place X C 241 

Playing patient sports " 242 

Playing in the wanton air P P 17 4 

Plea— No rightful plea might plead P L 1649 

a lawful plea commence Son 35 11 

doth that plea deny " 46 7 

shall beauty hold a plea " 65 3 

Plead— Shall plead for me Pi 480 

Pleads in a wilderness " 544 

No rightful plea might plead " 1649 

Who plead for love Son 23 11 

My heart doth plead " 46 5 

Pleaileth— are dumb when beauty 

pleadeth P L 268 

Pleadiiia: — her pleading tongue V A 217 

by pleading may be blest " 328 

pleading hath deserved " 609 

Her pity-pleading eyes P L 561 

There pleading might you see " 1401 

PI casaiice— Youth is full of P P 12 2 

Pleasant — pleasant fountains lie VA 234 

summer is less pleasant now Son 102 9 

Sitting in a pleasant shade P P 21 3 

Please — to please him thou art bright iSore 28 9 

do please these curious days " 38 13 

so it please thee hold " 136 11 

sickly appetite to please " 147 4 

How many tales to please me P P 7 9 

Pleased — If themselves, others V A 843 

ne'er pleased her babe " 974 

pleased with grief's society P L 1111 

is pleased to dote Son 141 4 

Pleasing — nimble notes to ... . earsP L 1126 

one pleasing note do sing Son 8 12 

hath a far more pleasing sound " 130 10 

Pleasure — birds such pleasure took VA 1101 

That all love's pleasure " 1140 

Having no other pleasure P L 860 

Thy secret pleasure turns " 890 

the private pleasure of some one " 1478 

Or else receivest with pleasure Son 8 4 
prick'd thee out for women's pleas- 
ure " 20 13 



Pleasure — From whence at pleasure S()n 48 12 

the tine point of seldom pleasure " 52 4 

control your times of pleasure " 58 2 

Not blame your pleasure " 58 14 

the world may see my pleasure " 75 8 

hath his adjunct pleasure " 91 5 

the pleasure of the fleeting year " 97 2 

his pleasures wait on thee " 97 11 

And the just pleasure lost " 121 3 

O thou minion of her pleasure " 126 9 

in moe jDleasures to bestow P C 139 

Where all those pleasures live P P 5 6 

take her meaning nor her pleasure " 11 12 

All our pleasure known " 18 45 

we will all the pleasures prove " 20 2 
And if these pleasures may thee 

move " 20 15 
These pretty pleasures might me 

move " 20 19 

Plenitude — In him a plenitude of 

subtle matter i C 302 

Plenty — amid their plenty VA 20 

with her plenty prcss'd " 545 

that even in plenty wanteth P L 557 

Plight — Shall plight your honour- 
able faiths " 1690 

return in happy plight Son 28 1 

to see my doleful plight P P 18 33 

Plod— Plods dully on Son 50 6 

Plot— Whoever plots the sin P L 879 

This plot of death " 1212 

heart think that a several plot Son 137 9 

Ploughman— To cheer the R L 958 

Pluck — pluck him from his horse V A 30 

Who plucks the bud " 416 

Pluck down the rich " 1150 

To pluck the quills R L 949 

do I my judgement pluck Son 14 1 

Pluck the keen teeth " 19 3 

l^luck them where they grew " 98 8 

still will pluck thee back " 126 6 

but cannot pluck the pelf PP 14 12 

Ne'er to pluck thee " 17 12 

Youth so apt to pluck a sweet " 17 14 

Pluek'd— being early pluck'd VA 528 

guilty hand pluck'd up the latch RL 358 

Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " 1807 

untimely pluck'd, soon vaded PP 10 1 

Pluck'd in the bud " 10 2 

Pluck'st— thou pluck'st a flower VA 946 

Plum — The mellow plum doth fall " 527 

Like a green plum P P 10 5 

Plume — like a falling plume V A 314 

Plump — flesh is soft and plump " 142 

Plunging — unpractised swimmer 

plunging P L 1098 

Pluto — Pluto winks while Orpheus 

plays " 553 

Poesy — under thee their poesy dis- 
perse Son 78 4 

Poet — would say, ' This poet lies " 17 7 

be term'd a poet's rage " 17 11 

and poets better jjrove " 32 13 

thy poet doth invent " 79 7 

The barren tender of a poet's debt " 83 4 

Than both your poets " 83 14 

god of both, as poets feign P P 8 13 

Poetry — If music and sweet poetry 

agree "81 



POINT 



229 



POSTING 



Point — With javelin's point a churl- 
ish swine to gore V A 616 

thy spear's point can enter " .. . 626 

the fine point of seldom pleasure Son 52 4 

Point — And seems to point her out H L 1087 

Points on me graciously Son 26 10 

doth point out thee " 151 9 

Pointed — the fair and fiery-pointed 

sun R L 372 

Point'st — thou point'st the season " 879 

Pointing — Pointing to each his 

thunder Son 14 6 

Poison — The bottom poison, and the 

top o'erstraw'd VA 1143 

I will not poison thee Ji L 1072 

Drugs poison him Son 118 14 

Poison'tl — Doth in her poison'd 

closet yet endure E L 1659 

The poison'd fountain clears " 1707 

If it be poison'd Son 114 13 

His poison'd me L C 301 

Poisoning— Life-poisoning pestilence F"j4 740 

Poisonous — The poisonous simple RL 530 

Knit poisonous clouds " 777 

Policy— For lawful policy remains " 529 

policy did him disguise " 1815 

Thus policy in love Son \\% 9 

It fears not policy, that heretic "124 9 

Polisli'd — In polish'd form " 85 8 

Politic — alone stands hugely politic " 124 11 

Pollute — impurity doth not pollute iJ i 854 

who did thy stock pollute " 1063 

Polluted— Of that polluted prison " 1726 

Pollution — my poor soul's pollution " 1157 

Pomp — suffers not in smiling pomp Son 124 6 

Poor — the worse for one poor kiss V A 207 

Poor queen of love " 251 

tites the poor flies " 316 

this poor heart of mine " 502 

the poor fool prays " 578 

Even as poor birds " 601 

As those poor birds " 604 

Mark the poor wretch " 680 

By this, poor Wat " 697 

how the world's poor people " 925 

poor Venus noteth " 1057 

Alas, poor world " 1075 

enrich the poor with treasures " 1150 

' Poor flower,' quoth she " 1177 

Poor wretches have remorse in 

poor abuses R L 269 

But all these poor forbiddings " 323 

May feel her heart, poor citizen " 465 

a poor unseasonable doe " 581 

the poor lamb cries " 677 

all recreant, poor and meek " 710 

Poor wasting monuments " 798 

The poor, lame, blind " 902 

One poor retiring minute " 962 

Poor grooms are sightless night " 1013 

' Poor hand, why quiver'st thou " 1030 

Poor helpless help, the treasure " 1056 

And for, poor bird " 1142 

As the poor frighted deer " 1149 

my poor soul's pollution " 1157 

Poor Lucrece' cheeks " 1217 

Poor women's faces " 1253 

Poor women's faults " 1258 

To the poor counterfeit " 1269 



Poor — ' Poor instrument,' quoth she iZ i 1464 

with one poor tired tongue " 1617 

was strong, my poor self weak " 1G46 

That my poor beauty " 1651 

Which speechless woe of his poor 

she attendeth " 1674 

should right poor ladies' harms " 1G94 

her poor tongue could not speak " 1718 

Her blood in poor revenge " 1736 

Poor broken glass " 1758 

come in his poor heart's aid " 1784 

which wit so poor as mine Son 26 5 

These poor rude lines " 32 4 

lame, poor, nor despised " 37 9 

To leave poor me " 49 13 

will my poor beast then find " 51 5 

Why should poor beaiity " 67 7 

as my poor name rehearse " 71 11 

I'll live in this poor rhyme " 107 11 

That poor retention " 122 9 

my oblation poor but free " 125 10 

Whilst my poor lips " 128 7 

my friend's heart let my poor 

heart bail " 133 10 

her poor infant's discontents " 143 8 

Poor soul, the centre of my sinful " 146 1 
thy poor drudge to be " 151 11 

their poor balls are tied L C 24 

known to us poor swains P P 18 45 

Poor Corydon " 18 52 

She, poor bird, as all forlorn " 21 9 

Even 30, poor bird, like thee " 21 27 

Poorer — far poorer than before R L 693 

Poorly — ^But, poorly rich, so wantetli " 97 

Is poorly imitated after you Son 53 6 

Poor-rich— they prove bankrupt in 

this poor-rich gain RL 140 

Portal — Once more the ruby-col- 

our'd portal open'd V A 451 

As each unwilling portal R L 309 

Posied — ring of .... gold and bone L C 45 

Possess — that which they possess R L 135 

the young possess their hive " 1769 

bids him possess his breath " 1777 

may jiossess the claim they lay " 1794 

Possess'd — And, if possess'd, as soon " 23 

For thou art so possess'd So7i 10 5 

like him with friends possess'd " 29 6 

Possesseth — possesseth all mine eye " 62 1 

Possessing — Possessing or pursuing " 75 11 
too dear for my possessing " 87 1 

Possession— In the possession of his 

beauteous mate R L 18 

Keep still possession " 803 

Nor lose possession Son 18 10 

and in possession so " 129 9 

Post — besieged Ardca all in post R L 1 

swift subtle post " 926 

The post attends " 1333 

Post — Post hither, this vile purpose " 220 

I post unto my pretty P P 15 9 

the night would post too soon " 15 13 

Posterity — to bury that posterity VA 758 

That my posterity R L 208 

to stop posterity Son 3 8 
Leaving thee living in posterity " 6 12 
in the eyes of all posterity " 55 11 
Leaving no posterity P T 59 

Posting — of posting is no need Son 51 4 



POSY 



230 



PRESAGER 



Posy — a thousand fragrant posies PP 20 10 

Potential — O most potential love L C 264 

Potion— Potions of eisel 'gainst Son 111 10 

What potions have I drunk " 119 1 

Pour — And mine I pour your ocean 

all among L C 256 

Ponr'st — that pour'st into my verse Son 38 2 

Pouted — AVho blush'd and pouted VA 33 

Poverty — Although thou steal thee 

all my poverty Son 40 10 

what poverty my Muse brings forth " 103 1 

Power — thy had lost his VA 944 

heartens up his servile powers R L 295 

solicited the eternal power " 345 

The powers to whom I pray " 349 

and all the power of both " 572 

than one_ hath power to tell " 1288 

is drawn the power of Greece " 1368 

He hath no power to ask " 1594 

Another power ; no flood " 1677 

o'ersways their power Son 65 2 

They that have power " 94 1 

Darkening thy power " 100 4 

mj' lovely boy, who in my power " 126 1 

hath put on nature's power " 127 5 

Thy face hath not the power " 131 .6 

Use power with jjower " 139 4 

these rebel powers that thee array " 146 2 

0, from what power " 150 1 

over me hath power L C 74 

affections in his charmed power " 146 

' " My parts had power to charm " 260 

Ponerfiil — shall outlive this power- 
ful rhyme Son 55 2 
hast thou this powerful might " 150 1 

Practice — To put in practice either P P 16 7 

Lest she some subtle practice smell "19 9 

Practised — eyes have never prac- 
tised how RL 748 

Praise— Therefore that praise which 

Collatine " 82 

And decks with praises " 108 

shame and thriftless prJEiise Son 2 8 
How much more jiraise "29 

thine shall be the praise " 38 14 

What can mine own praise " 39 3 

your praise sliall still find room " 55 10 

have given admiring praise " 59 14 

with outward praise is crown'd " 09 5 

accents do this praise confound " 69 7 
Yet this thy praise cannot be so 

thy praise " 70 11 

hang more praise wpon deceased I " 72 7 

No praise to thee " 79 12 

And in the praise thereof " 80 3 

a limit past my praise " 82 6 

can in praise devise " 83 14 

Than this rich praise " 84 2 
Being fond on praise, which makes 

your praises worse " 84 14 

While comments of your praise " 85 2 

But to the most of praise " 85 10 

but in a kind of praise " 95 7 

Because he needs no praise " 101 9 

hath my added praise beside " 103 4 

alike my songs and praises be " 105 3 

In praise of ladies dead " 106 4 

So all their praises " 106 9 

To know my shames and praises " lf2 6 



Praise — weighs down the airy scale 

of praise L C 226 

Which is to me some praise JP P 5 10 

To sing heaven's praise " 5 14 

When thy desert may merit praise " 19 27 

Praise — To praise the clear un- 
matched red R L 11 

I will not praise that purpose not 

to sell Son 21 14 

mine own when I praise thee " 39 4 

that for myself I praise " 62 13 

Nor praise the deep vermillion " 98 10 

but lack tongues to praise " 106 14 

Praised — prodigal that .... her so P i 79 

Hearing you praised, I say Son 85 9 

And to be praised of ages yet to be " 101 12 

and praised cold chastity L C 315 

Praisina; — By praising him here Son 39 14 

Praising thy worth " 60 14 

Pray — I pray you hence V A 382 

The poor fool prays her " 578 

to pray he doth begin R L 342 

The powers to whom I pray " 349 

rebel for remission prays " 714 

She prays she never may behold " 746 

So will I pray that thou Son 143 13 

Prayer — in the midst of his unfruit- 
ful prayer R L 344 

she with vehement prayer " 475 

His ear her prayers admits " 558 

but yet, like jirayers divine Son 108 5 

For these dead birds sigh a prayer P T 67 

Preacli — that preach in our behoof L C 165 

Preach'd — He preach'd pure maid " 315 

Precedent — The precedent of pith VA 26 

The precedent whereof R L 1261 

ever shunn'd by precedent L C 155 

Precept — what are precepts worth " 267 

Precious — Whose precious taste VA 543 

dropp'd a precious jewel " 824 

income of each precious thing R L 334 

t.ike root with precious flowers " 870 

For precious friends hid Son 30 6 

I have no precious time " 57 3 

thy isrecious minutes waste " 77 2 

And precious phrase " 85 4 

of all too precious you " S3 2 

fairest and most precious jewel " 131 4 

Precurrer- Foul of the fiend P T G 

Pre-decease — If children pre-de- 

cease progenitors R L 1756 

Predict — By oft predict that I in 

heaven find Son 14 8 

Prefer — That shall prefer and un- 
dertake L C 280 

Prefiguring — all you prefiguring Son 106 10 

Premeditate— he doth premeditate R L 183 

Prepare — bid the wind a base he 

now prepares VA 303 

prepare to carry it R L 1294 

and she prepares to write " 1293 

prepares to let them know " 1607 

you should prepare Son 13 3 

doth prepare the cup " 114 12 

Preposterously — could so preposter- 
ously be stain'd " 109 11 

Presage — This ill presage VA 457 

augurs mock their own presage Son 107 6 

Presager — And dumb presagers " 23 10 



PRESCIENCE 



231 



PRISON'D 



Prescience — Which in her R L 727 

Prescription — his prescriptions are 

not kept Son 147 6 

Presence — Be as thy presence is " 10 11 

And with liis presence " 67 2 

Present — Thatevery present sorrow F^ 970 

Hindering their present fall R L 551 

To view thy present trespass " 632 

Of present death, and shame " 1263 

Some present speed to come " 1307 

Each present lord began " 1696 

Presents thy shadow Son 27 10 

Thyself away art present " 47 10 

behold these present days " 106 13 

Crowning the present " 115 12 

at the present nor the past " 123 10 

upon myself with present moan " 149 8 
Present-absent — These present-ab- 
sent with swift motion slide " 45 4 

Presented — advantage on ... . joy V A 405 

Present's! — And thou present'st Son 70 8 

Presenteth — presenteth tomineeyeFJ. 661 

this huge stage presenteth Son 15 3 

Presently — do presently abuse it R L 864 

being clouded presently is missed " 1007 

that's broken presently P P 13 4 

Preserve— which doth the ill Son 147 3 

Press— Much like a press of people R L 1301 

a press of gaping faces " 1408 

as thou art cruel ; do not press Son 140 1 
Press never thou to choose P P 19 34 

Press'd — now press'd with bearing V A 430 

with her plenty press'd " 545 

my o'er-press'd defencecan bide Son 139 8 
Prestime— Presume not on thy heart " 22 13 

Pretended — as thou hast pretended R L 576 

Prettily — entreats, and. ... entreats F^ 73 

Pretty — For to a pretty ear " 74 

appears a pretty dimple " 242 

A pretty while these pretty crea- 
tures stand R L 1233 

Those pretty wrongs Son 41 1 

Looking with pretty ruth " 132 4 

Her pretty looks have been , " 139 10 

I post unto my pretty P P 15 9 

These pretty pleasures " 20 19 

Prevailed — till she have prevailed Son 41 8 

Prevent — did wittily prevent V A 471 

this vile purpose to prevent R L 220 

I could prevent this storm " 966 

to prevent our maladies Son 118 3 

Prevent'st — thou .... his scythe " 100 14 

Prey — or prey be gone V A 58 

on the steam as on a prey " 63 

caught the yielding prey " 547 

Eich preys make true men " 724 

the wolf would leave his prey ' " 1097 

That for his prey R L 342 

lion fawneth o'er his prey " 421 

The wolf hath seized his prey " 677 

The prey wherein by nature they 

delight " 697 

Art left the prey Son 48 8 

The prey of worms " 74 10 

Priam — painting, tnade for Priam's 

Troy RL 1367 

Staring on Priam's wounds " 1448 

in Priam's painted wound " 1466 

weeps Hecuba, here Priam dies " 1485 



Priam— Had doting Priam check'd R L 1490 

The credulous old Priam " 1522 

as Priam him did cherish " 1546 

listening Priam wets his eyes " 1548 

Priam, why art thou old " 1550 

To Priam's trust false Sinon's tears " 1560 

Price— pitch the price so high VA 551 

Priceless — What priceless wealth R L 17 

Prick — the needle his finger pricks " 319 

his weary noon-tide prick " 781 

Prick'd — His ears up-prlck'd V A 271 

but since she prick'd thee out Son 20 13 

Pricking — curb or pricking spur V A 285 

Prickles — What though the rose 

have prickles " 574 

Pride — and modest pride " 278 

Loseth his pride "' 420 

Sith in thy pride " 762 

so their pride doth grow R L 298 

Swell in their pride " 432 

Smoking with pride " 438 

they in thy pride " 662 

While Lust is in his pride " 705 

Who in their pride " 864 

boundeth in his pride " 1669 

his wit in state and pride " 1809 

their pride lies buried Son 25 7 

his imprison'd pride " 52 12 

so barren of new pride " 76 1 

and of goodly pride " 80 12 

of all men's pride I boast " 91 12 

my love's breath ? The purple pride " 99 3 

in pride of all his growth " 99 12 

such a scope to show her pride " 103 2 

shook three summers' pride " 104 4 

with her foul pride " 144 8 

Proud of this pride " 151 10 

a careless hand of pride L C 30 

falseness in a pride of truth " 105 

with her fair pride P P 2 8 

Priest — Let the priest in surplice 

white P T 13 

Prime — gather'd in their prime V A 131 

wither in their prime " ..... 418 

Sith in his prime " 1163 

rejoicing to the prime R L 332 

the lovely April of her prime Son 3 10 

behold the violet past prime " 12 3 

a pure unstained prime " 70 8 

wanton burthen of the prime " 97 7 

Primrose — this primrose bank V A 151 

Prince — For princes are the glass R L 615 

Or say with princes Son 14 7 

Great princes' favorites " 25 5 

Of princes, shall outlive " 55 2 

Princely — welcome to her princely 

guest R L 90 

wound'st his princely name " 599 

Thy princely office " 628 

Princess — To ask the spotted .... " 721 

Print — her soft hand's print V A 353 

Thou shouldst print more Son 11 14 

Prison — And in her vaulty prison R L 119 

in that darksome prison died " 379 

will prison false desire " 642 

Of that polluted prison " 172G 

Prison my heart Son 133 9 

Prison'd — A lily prison'd V A 362 

prison'd in her eye " 9S0 



PRISONER 



232 



PROVE 



Prisoner — ^Leading him prisoner VA 110 

ta'en prisoner by the foe jB L 160S 

judge is robb'd, the prisoner dies " 1652 

A liquid prisoner pent in walls Son 5 10 

Private — crest-wounding, .... scar R L 828 

Thy private feasting " 891 

Why should the private pleasure " 1478 

To plague a private sin " 1484 

When every private widow Son 9 7 

Privilege — To privilege dishonour R L 621 

may privilege your time Son 58 10 

of this large privilege " 95 13 

Privileged — And, privileged by age L C 62 

Prize — Desire my pDot is, beauty 

my prize ' R L 279 

thievish for a prize so dear Son 48 14 

Bound for the prize " 86 2 

As his triumphant prize " 151 10 

Prizing — Not .... her poor infant " 143 8 

Proceed — and doth so far proceed R L 251 

no water thence proceeds " 1552 

from weak minds proceeds " 1825 

and where they did proceed Son 76 8 

the slander, as I think, proceeds " 131 14 
Proceeding — yet his proceedings 

teach thee VA 406 

Like the proceedings " 910 

Process — In process of the season Son 104 6 
Proclaim — And peace proclaims 

olives of endless age " 107 8 

Proclaini'd — . ... in her a careless L C 30 

Procure— Procure to weep P P 18 32 
Procured — to tempt all, liberty pro- 
cured L C 252 

Prodigal — Be prodigal : the lamp VA 755 

The niggard prodigal R L 79 

If that one be prodigal P P 21 39 

Prodigies — apparitions, signs, and 

prodigies VA 926 

Profane — Lest I, too much profane Son 89 11 

Profiined — profaned in such a devil R L 847 

But is profaned, if not Son 127 8 

profaned their scarlet ornaments " 142 6 

Proffer — to take her figured proffer P P 4 10 

To proffer, though she put thee 

back " 19 36 

Profit— the profit of excess R L 138 

Shall profit thee Son 77 14 

Profitless — Profitless usurer, why 

dost thou use "47 

Profound — In so profound abysm " 112 9 
Progenitor — children pre-decease 

Ijrogenitors R L 17.56 

Prognosticate — this I prognosticate Son 14 13 
Progress — progress to eternity " 77 8 

Promise — Upon this promise V A 85 

Promise more speed R £ 1349 

lord began to promise aid " 1696 

Why didst thou promise Son 34 1 

Promised — 'Tis .... in the charity L C 70 

Prompt — All replication prompt " 122 

Prone — O, that .... lust should stain RL 684 

to base touches prone Son 141 6 
Pronounced — 'Tarquin' was pro- 
nounced plain R L 1786 

Proof— Are better proof V A 626 

On newer proof, to try Son 110 11 

And on just proof " 117 10 

A bliss in proof, and proved " 129 11 



Proof— Of proofs new -bleeding 

which remain L C 153 

curb it upou other's proof " 163 

Property — his iuvised properties did 

tend " 212 

Property was thus appalled P T 37 

Prophecy — with dreadful prophecies F J. 928 

praises are but prophecies Son 106 9 

Prophesy — I prophesy thy death VA 671 

lo, here I prophesy " 1135 

Prophetic — nor the prophetic soul Son 107 1 

Proportion'd — a well-proportion'd 

steed VA 290 

Make war against proportion'd 

course of time R L 774 

Proposed — great treasure is the 

meed proposed " 132 

Before, a joy proposed Son 12^ 12 

Protest — she doth protest V A 581 

Protestation— The stops R L 1700 

to his protestation urged " 1844 

Protesting — of all her pure protest- 

ings PP 7 11 

Proud — And rein his proud head V A 14 

O, be not proud " 113 

lusty, young, and proud " 260 

with his proud sight " 288 

proud rider on so proud a back " 300 

Being proud, as females are " 309 

rough bear, or lion proud " 884 

Clapping their proud tails " 923 

at such high-proud rate R L 19 

this proud issue of a king " 37 

proud of such a dignity " 437 

The flesh being proud " 712 

To ruinate proud buildings " 944 

those proud lords to blame " 1259 

painter drew so proud " 1371 

under Pyrrhus' proud foot " 1448 

Thy youth's proud livery Son 2 3 

eouplement of proud compare " 21 5 

and proud titles boast " 25 2 

The rich-proud cost " 64 2 

And, proud of many, lives " 67 12 

Now proud as an enjoyer " 75 5 

Yet be most proud " 78 9 

Was it the proud full sail " 86 1 

Or from their proud lap " 98 8 

though thy proud heart go wide " 140 14 

Thy proud heart's slave " 141 12 

That is so proud " 149 10 

Proud of this pride " 151 10 

Proud of subjection L C 108 

a youngster proud and wild P P 9 4 

Prouder — . . . . than garments' cost Son 91 10 

Proudest — as the sail doth bear " 80 6 

Proudly — proudly make them cruel '• 131 2 

Proud-pied — When proud-pied April " 98 2 

Prove — she begins to prove VA 40 

prove nothing worth " 418 

she doth prove " 597 

That they prove bankrupt R L 140 

the like offences prove " 613 

Since men prove beasts " 1148 

Thou single wilt prove none Son 8 14 

at least kind-hearted prove " 10 12 

where thou mayst prove me " 26 14 

and poets better prove " 32 13 

what a torment wouldst thou prove " 39 9 



PROVE 



233 



PUT 



\ 



Prove — For truth proves thievish Son 48 14 

can nothing worthy prove " 72 4 

And prove thee virtuous " 88 4 

says I did strive to prove " 117 13 

Which prove more short " 125 4 
things of great receipt with ease 

we prove " 136 7 

thy sweet self prove " lol 4 

which yet men prove " 153 7 

and this by that I prove " 154 13 

but I will prove P P 3 5 
to thee I'll constant prove "53 

Unless thy lady prove unjust " 19 33 

will all the pleasures prove " 20 2 

Proved — as may be proved VA 608 

proved thee my best of love <Sc>re 110 6 
error and upon me proved " 116 13 
and proved a very woe " 129 11 
Provide — better for my life provide " 111 8 
Proving — Proving from world's mi- 
nority R L 67 

Proving his beauty by succession Son 2 12 

Provoke — doth provoke a pause VA 218 

cannot provoke him on Son 50 9 

Provoked — provoked my tongue VA 1003 

Provokest — provokest such weeping " 949 

Pry — into my deeds to pry Son 61 6 

Pry'st— Why pry'st thou through R L 1089 

Public— to a public fast " 891 

Become the public plague " 1479 

Of public honour and proud titles Son 25 2 

Nor thou with public kindness " 36 11 

public means which public manners " 111 4 

Publish— And so to publish i? L 1852 

doth publish everywhere Son 102 4 
Publisher — why is Collatine the 

publisher R L 33 

Puddle— The sea within a puddle's 

womb " 657 

And not the puddle " 658 

Puff— Putt's forth another wind " 315 

Pulse — holds her pulses hard I'.4 476 

Punishment — deserve not PP 3 4 

Pupil — Time's pencil or my pen 5ort 16 10 

Purblind — the purblind hare V A 679 

Purchase — Which .... if thou make " 515 

Would purchase thee a thousand R L 963 

Purchased — Your own dear-pur- 
chased right Son 117 6 
Pure — Pure shame and awed resist- 
ance VA 69 

Pure lips, sweet seals " 511 

Forgetting shame's pure blush " 558 

And pure perfection " 736 

In their pure ranks R L 73 

Pure thoughts are dead " 167 

Offer pure incense to so pure " 194 

All pure effects, and doth " 251 

But with a pure appeal " 293 

In a pure compound " 531 

From a pure heart command " 625 

should stain so pure a bed " 684 

Pure chastity is rifled " 692 

to close so pure a mind " 761 

was pure to Collatine " 826 

Shall gush pure streams " 1078 

When the one pure " 1164 

yieldings, but still pure " 1658 

May my pure mind " 1704 



Pure — stiU pure and red remain'd R L 1742 

a pure unstained prime Son 70 8 

pure and most most loving " 110 14 

He preach'd pure maid L C 315 

all her pure protestings P P 7 11 

Purer- Some purer chest to close R L 761 

Purest — And purest faith unhappily 

forsworn Son 66 4 

Purare— to purge my impure tale R L 1078 

shun sickness when we purge Son 118 4 

Pnrsrlng — slight air and purgiug fire " 45 1 

Purified— in effect is purified R L 532 

Pnrify^ould weeping purify " 685 

Purity — The life of purity " 780 

Wooing his purity Son 144 8 

Wooing his purity PP 2 8 

Purl'd — which purl'd up to the sky R L 1407 

Purloin'd — had purloin'd his eyes " 1651 

Purple — With purple tears V A 1054 

a purple flower sprung up " 1168 

And from the purple fountain R L 1734 

The purple pride Son 99 3 

Purple-colour* d — with face V A 1 

Purpose — the purpose of his coming 

hither R L 113 

This vile purpose to prevent " 220 

Yet for the self-same purpose " 1047 

one thing to my purpose Son 20 12 

strongly in my purpose bred " 112 13 

She keeps thee to this purpose " 126 7 
On purpose laid to make the taker 

mad " 129 8 

Purpose — I purpose to destroy thee R L 514 

that purpose not to sell Son 21 14 
Purposed — linger out a purposed 

overthrow " 90 8 

Yet their purposed trim L C 118 

Pursue — these fearful creatures I',4 677 

his foes pursue him still " 699 

yet he still pursues his fear R L 308 

Pnrsuei-s — stop the loud pursuers I'^-l 688 

Pursuing — or pursuing no delight Son 75 11 

Pursuit — Make slow pursuit R L 696 

With swift pursuit to venge " 1691 

Mad in pursuit Son 129 9 

In pursuit of the thing " 143 4 

Push— To push grief on R L 1673 

Push'd — Backward she push'd him T'.4 41 

Put — puts on outward strangeness " 810 

before one leaf put forth " 416 

gold that's put to use " 768 

put his bonnet on " 1087 

put fear to valour " 11.58 

I could not put him back R L 843 

She puts the period " 565 

Hast thou put on his shape " 597 

is put besides his part Son 23 2 

And puts apparel on " 26 11 

doth put this in my mind " 50 13 

Hath put a spirit " 98 3 

hath put on nature's power " 127 5 

Have put on black " 132 3 

To put fair truth " 137 12 

hath Love put in my head " 148 1 

and in it put their mind L C 135 

put the by-past perils in her way " 158 

put to the smallest teen " 192 

love put out Religion's eye " 250 

To put in practice either P P 16 7 



PUT 



234 



QUOTH 



Put — with scorn she put away P P 19 18 

though she put thee back " 19 36 

Put'st— that put'st forth all to use Son 134 10 

Putrifled — that which is so putrifiedP i 1750 

Pyramid — Thy pyramids built up So)i 123 2 
Pyrrlius — under Pyrrhus' proud foot 

lies P L 1448 

And rail on Pyrrhus " 1467 

Quake — tributary subject quakes VA 1045 

saw them quake and tremble P L 1H93 

in his fire doth quake with cold " 1556 

Quaking — Bids them leave quaking F.4 899 

Qualified— lust by gazing qualified P L 424 

Qualify — seem'd my flame to qualify Son 109 2 

Quality — savour, hue, and qualities VA 747 

his life or else his quality P I, 875 

her grief's true quality " 1313 

What is the quality " 1702 

of dearths or season's quality Son 14 4 

His qualities were beauteous L C 99 

nature, worth, and quality " 210 

Queen — the love-sick queen began VA 175 

Poor queen of love " 251 

leaders to their queen " 503 

'Fair queen,' quoth he " 523 

All in vain ; good queen " 607 

where their queen " 1193 

was the other queen P L 66 

The silver-shining queen " 786 

on the finger of a throned queen Son 96 5 

could look but beauty's queen P P 4 4 

on her back, fair queen, and toward " 4 13 

as this queen on him " 6 12 

the queen of music, makes " 8 10 

when the fair queen of love "91 

She, silly queen "97 

'Twixt the turtle and his queen P T 31 

Quench— .... the maiden burning VA .50 

ril quench them with my tears " 192 

To quench the coal P L 47 

ocean quench their light " 12:^1 

with my tears quench Troy " 1468 

Quenched — This brand she .... Son 154 9 

Quenchless — are balls of ... . fire P L 1554 

Quest — A quest of thoughts Son 46 10 

and in quest to have " 129 10 

Question — do I question make " 12 9 

Nor dare I question " 57 9 

hence a question takes X C 110 

arguments and question deep " 121 

and 3'et do question make " 321 

Questioned— after supper long he 

questioned P L 122 

Quick— O, how quick is love VA 38 

bright, and quick in turning " 140 

Now quick desire " 547 

In youth, quick bearing P L 1387 

nor war's quick iire shall burn Son 55 7 

variation or quick change " 76 2 

Of his quick objects " 113 7 
Quicker — these quicker elements 

are gone " 45 5 

Quickly— ducks as quickly in VA 87 

quickly told and quickly gone " 520 

other kills thee quickly " 990 

quickly is convey'd " 1192 

flre did quickly steep Son 153 3 

But quickly on this side L C 113 



Quickly — Quickly him they will en- 
tice PP 21 44 
Quick -shifting — Quick-shifting an- 
tics JRL 459 

Quiet — Into the quiet closure VA 782 

. shall it keep in quiet " 1149 

mustering to the quiet cabinet P L 442 

her quiet interrupted " 1170 

for myself no quiet find Son 27 14 

Quietly — Lie quietly, and hear VA 709 

Quietus — her is to render thee Son 126 12 

Quill— To pluck the quills P L 949 

o'er the paper with her quill " 1297 

How far a modern quill Son 83 7 
their chai-acter with golden quill " 85 3 

Quit — Nor youth all quit L C 13 

Quite — heart were quite undone VA 783 

quite beaten from her breast P L 1563 

and lusty leaves quite gone Son 5 7 

book of honour rased quite " 25 11 

quite contrary I read " 62 11 

dear love, forget me quite " 72 3 
over-goes my blunt invention quite " 103 7 
All my merry jigs are quite forgot P P 18 9 

Quittal — a quittal of such strife P L 236 

Quiver'st — why quiver'st thou at 

this decree " 1030 

Quote — .... my loathsome trespass " 812 

Quoth — ' Ay me,' quoth Venus VA 187 

' I know not love,' quoth he " 409 

canst thou talk?' quoth she " 427 

where am I?' quoth she " 493 

' Fair queen,' quoth he " 523 

'Good-night,' quoth she " 537 

' The boar,' quoth she " 589 

' Thou hadst been gone,' quoth she " 613 

' No matter where,' quoth he " 715 

what of that?' quoth she " 717 

'I am,' quoth he " 718 

'In night,' quoth she " 720 

'Nay, then,' quoth Adon " 769 

'No, no,' quoth she " 997 

'0 Jove,' quoth she " 1015 

'And yet,' quoth she " 1070 

' Wonder of time,' quoth she " 1133 

'Poor flower,' quoth she " 1177 

Quoth he, ' She took me kindly P L 253 

' So, so,' quoth he, ' these lets " 330 

quoth he, 'I must deflower " 348 

' Lucrece,' quoth he, ' this night " 512 

Quoth she, ' Reward not " 575 

'Have done,' quoth he " 645 

' Thou art,' quoth she, ' a sea " 652 

'No more,' quoth he; 'by heaven " 667 

' For day,' quoth she " 747 

' In vain,' quoth she, ' I live " 1044 

' You mocking birds,' quoth she " 1121 

' To kill myself,' quoth she " 1156 

' My girl,' quoth she " 1270 

' 0, peace !' quoth Lucrece " 1284 

' Poor instrument,' quoth she " 1464 

'It cannot be,' quoth she " 1534 

' Fool, fool !' quoth she " 1568 

' Few words,' quoth she " 1613 

groom of thine," quoth he " 1632 

you fair lords,' quoth she '• 1688 

' O, speak,' quoth she " 1700 

' No, no,' quoth she " 1714 

' 0,' quoth Lucretius, ' I did give " 1800 



QUOTH 



235 



RAW 



(Juoth—' Woe, woe,' quoth Collatine iJ i 1802 

quoth he, ' arise " 1818 

' O Jove,' quoth she P P 6 14 

' Once,' quoth she, ' did I see "99 

See, in my thigh," quoth she " 9 12 

'Even thus,' quoth she " 11 5 

'Even thus,' quoth she " 11 7 

' Even thus,' quoth she " 11 9 

' Farewell,' quoth she " 14 5 

' Ail-,' quoth he " 17 9 

Race — no dull flesh in his fiery race Son 51 11 

Itiick — With ugly rack on his ce- 
lestial face " 33 6 

Radiance — their sickly radiance do 

amend L C 214 

Rage— swelleth with more rage VA 332 

in fell battle's rage JR L 145 

and in a desperate rage " 219 

His rage of lust by gazing " 424 

more rage and lesser pity " 468 

treason, rape, and murder's rages " 909 

blunt rage and rigour roll'd " 1398 

such signs of rage they bear " 1419 

In rage sent out, recall'd in rage, 

being past " 1671 

rage of death's eternal cold Son 13 12 

be term'd a poet's rage " 17 11 

replete with too much rage " 23 3 

eternal slave to mortal rage " 64 4 

How with this rage shall beauty " 65 3 

/ but spite of heaven's fell rage L O 13 

This said, in top of rage " 55 

For when we rage, advice is often 
seen " 160 

Ragged — on a ragged bough V A 37 

titles to a ragged name R L 892 

winter's ragged hand deface Son 6 1 

Raging-mad— It shall be VA 1151 

Rail— In vain I rail at Opportunity R L 1023 

And rail on Pyrrhus " 1467 

Rail'd— I rail'd on thee VA 1002 

Raiment — the seemly raiment of 

my heart Son 22 6 

Rain — Kain added to a river VA 71 

stone at rain releuteth " 200 

from tempest and from rain " 238 

like sunshine,after rain " 799 

breaks the silver rain " 959 

now wind, now rain " 965 

This windy tempest till it blow 

up rain R L 1788 

to each his thunder, rain, and 

wind Son 14 6 
To dry the rain on my storm- 
beaten face " 34 6 
yet receives rain still " 135 9 
with sorrow's wind and rain L C 7 

Rain — chorus-like her eyes did rain VA ..... 360 
At last it rains, and busy winds R L 1790 

Rainbow — like rainbows in the sky " 1587 

Rain'd— Which long have raiu'd V A 83 

Raineth — hush'd before it raineth " 458 

Raining — though marble wear with 

raining R L 560 

that down thy cheeks are raining " 1271 

no flood by raining slacketh " 1677 

Rainy — a windy night, a rainy mor- 
row Son 90 7 



Raise — did he raise his chin VA 85 

that burning lungs did raise L C 228 

Raised — thy unworthiness raised 

love in me Son 150 13 

Ram — Rude ram, to batter such an 

ivory wall R L 464 

My rams speed not P P 18 3 

Ran — He ran upon the boar VA 1112 

To Simois' reedy banks the red 

blood ran R L 1437 

He rose and ran away P P 4 14 

Random — hatefully at random V A 940 

At random from the truth Son 147 12 

Ranged—love; if I have ranged " 109 5 

Rank — a river that is rank VA 71 

add the rank smell of weeds Son 69 12 

By their rank thoughts ' " 121 12 

To blush at speeches rank L C 307 

Rank — In their pure ranks R L 73 

Whose ranks of blue veins " 440 

that in their smoky ranks " 783 

ridges; and their ranks began " 1439 

till meeting greater ranks " 1441 

To march in ranks Son 32 12 

holds his rank before " 85 12 

Which rank of goodness " 118 12 

above that idle rank remain " 122 3 

Ransack'd — But robb'd and . . . . RL 838 

Ransom — Paying what ransom V A 550 

are rich and ransom all Son 34 14 
Mine ransom yours, and yours 

must ransom me " 120 14 

Rape — treason, rape, and murder's 

rages R L 909 

For Helen's rape the city " 1369 

Rare — first-born flowers and all 

things rare Son 21 7 

feasts so solemn and so rare " 52 5 

thrice more wish'd, more rare " 56 14 

by heaven, I think my love as rare " 130 13 

Rarest— Whose rarest havings made 

the blossoms dote L C 235 

Rarity — the rarities of nature's 

truth Son 60 11 

Beauty, truth, and rarity P T 53 

Rascal — base bed of some groom R L 671 

Rash — Her rash suspect she doth V A 1010 

The reason of this rash alarm R L 473 

seducing lust, thy rash relier " 639 

or rein his rash desire " 706 

Rash-false — O rash-false heat " 48 

Rate— to rate the boar VA 906 

at such high-proud rate R L 19 

they all rate his ill " 304 

Rather — hut rather famish them V A 20 

Eather than triumph R L 77 

And rather make them born Son 123 7 

Rave— time against himself to rave R L 982 

Riiven — quills from ancient raven's 

wings " 949 

my mistress' eyes are raven black Son 127 9 

Ravish — ravish the morning air R L 778 

doth ravish human sense PP 8 6 

Ravisher — treason and the ravisher R L 770 

Thou ravisher, thou traitor " ..... 888 

Ravishment — death and ravishment " 430 

that sing'st of ravishment " 1128 

Raw — though sod in tears, look'd 

red and raw " 1592 



RAZED 



236 



REEDY 



Razed— Is from the book of honour 

razed quite Son 25 11 

towers I see down-razed " 64 3 

Till each to razed oblivion " 122 7 

Bead— Nor read the subtle-shining 

secrecies R L 101 

eyes do learn, do read, do look " 616 

read lectures of such shame " 618 

may read the mot afar " 830 

must be used, read it in me " 1195 

in them I read such art Son 14 10 

O, learn to read " 23 13 

Theirs for their style I'll read " 32 14 

quite contrary I read " 62 11 

Nay, if you read this line " 71 5 

eyes not yet created shall o'er-read " 81 10 

Keadily — tread the way out readily R L 1152 

Keading — reading what contents it 

bears L C 19 

Ready — were ready for his pay V A 89 

Bid thou be ready by and by R L 1292 

Real — His real habitude gave life L C 114 

Reap — should that harvest reap Son 128 7 

Rear — Anon, he rears upright V A 279 

Reanvard — Come in the rearward Son 90 6 

Reason — beating reason back V A 557 

You have no reason " 612 

I perceive the reason " 727 

When reason is the bawd " 792 

past reason's weak removing R L 243 

Respect and reason wait " 275 

The reason of this rash alarm " 473 

reproof and reason beat it dead " 489 

spurn'st at right, at law, at reason " 880 

reasons find of settled gravity Son 49 8 

To guard the lawfid reasons " 49 12 

Against thy reasons making " 89 4 

my judgement knew no reason " 115 3 

Past reason hunted " 129 6 

Past reason hated " 129 7 

My reason, the physician " 147 5 

now reason is past care " 147 9 

flesh stays no farther reason " 151 8 

prompt and reason strong L C 122 

Though Reason weep and cry " 168 

resolved my reason into tears " 296 

Let reason rule things PP 19 3 

Reason in itself confounded P T 41 

Love hath reason, reason none " 47 

Reave — reaves his son of life V A 766 

Rebel— command thy rebel will R L 625 

The guilty rebel for remission " 714 

these rebel powers that thee array So7i 146 2 

Relinked — So I return rebuked " 119 13 

Recall'd — In rage sent out, recall'd 

in rage R L 1671 

Receipt — Desire must vomit his re- 
ceipt " 703 

In things of great receipt Son 136 7 

Receive — receives her soft hand's 

print VA 353 

Receives the scroll RL 1340 

my name receives a brand Son 111 5 

receives reproach of being " 121 2 

tables that receive thee more " 122 12 

yet receives rain still " 135 9 

which did no form receive L C 241 

all strange forms receives " 303 

Received — I have .... from many " 206 



Receivest— that which thou not Son 8 3 

Or else receivest with pleasure "84 

thou my love receivest " 40 5 

Receivinar — Receiving nought by 

elements " 44 13 

Recite — world should task you to .... " 72 1 
Recketh — What recketh he his 

rider's angry stir V A 283 

Reckon — At my abuses reckon up 

their own Son 121 10 

Reckon'd — one is reckon'd none " 136 8 

Reckoning — Reckoning his fortune P i 19 

But reckoning Time Son 115 5 

Recompense — and look for ... . " 23 11 

Reconciled — pervert a maid LC 329 

Record — So should my shame still 

rest upon record R L 1643 

The living record of your memory i&n 55 8 
record could with a backward look " 59 5 
thy record never can be miss'd " 122 8 

thy records and what we see doth 
lie " 123 11 

Recounting — recounting it to me " 45 12 

Recreant — all . . . ., poor, and meek R L 710 

Recreate — To recreate himself V A 1095 

Reciire — A smile .... the wounding " 465 

Recured — life's composition be ... . Son 45 9 

Red — white and red than doves V A 10 

Making them red and pale " 21 

She red and hot as coals " 3.5 

He red for shame " 3S 

Being red, she loves him " 77 

drum and ensign red " 107 

not as fair, yet are they red " 116 

Red cheeks and fiery eyes " 219 

How white and red " 346 

Like a red morn " 453 

till clapping makes it red " 468 

on my wax-red lips " 516 

bepainted all with red " 901 

mine eyes' red fire " 1073 

mulberries and ripe-red cherries " 1103 

clear unmatched red and white RL 11 

claims from beauty beauty's red " 59 

the red should fence the white " 63 

Argued by beauty's red " 65 

First red as roses " 258 

And the red rose blush " 479 

two red fires in both their faces " 1353 

The red blood reek'd " 1377 

bears back all boll'n and red " 1417 

reedy banks the red blood ran " 1437 

Cheeks neither red nor pale " 1510 

blushing red no guilty instance " 1511 

sod in tears, look'd red and raw " 1592 

still jjure and red remain'd " 1742 

untainted still doth red abide " 1749 

A third, nor red nor white Son 99 10 

more red than her lips' red " 130 2 

roses damask'd, red and white " 130 5 

paled pearls and rubies red as blood L C 198 

Redeem — Return, forgetful Muse, 

and straight redeem Son 100 5 

Redress— that we may give redress R L 1603 

broken glass no cement can redress PP 13 10 
Redoubled — Passion on passion deep- 
ly is redoubled VA 832 

Red-rose — in a red-rose chain " 110 

Reedy — To Simois' reedy banks R L 1437 



REEK 



237 



RENEW'D 



Beek — Her face doth reek VA 555 

that from my mistress reeks Son 130 S 

Roek'tl— The red blood reek'd S L 3377 

Beekiiii? — furnace of foul-reeking 

smoke " 790 

Keeletli — he reeleth from the day Son 7 10 

Eeflgurt'd — ten times refigured thee " 6 10 

Refined — form of well refined-pen " , 85 8 

Reflect — and now no more reflect V A 1130 

that she reflects so bright R L 376 

Refrain — I could from tears refrain P P 21 16 

Refresli — no rubbing will refresh " 13 8 

Reft— reft from her by death VA 1174 

Refuse — this refuge let me find R L 165'1 

Refuse — the very refuse of thy deeds Son 150 6 
Refused — Or he refused to take her 

figured PP 4 10 

But one must be i-efused " 16 9 

Refusest — of what thyself refusest Son 40 8 

Reg:ard — I never shall regard V A 377 

deep regard beseems the sage R L 277 

creeping thief to some regard " 805 

Show'd deep regard " 1400 

emerald, in whose fresh regard L C 213 

Region — The region cloud hath 

'^ mask'd him Son 33 12 

Register — Dim register and notary R L 765 

what new to register Son 108 3 

Thy registers and thee " 123 9 

false blood, thou register of liesZ C 52 

Rehearse — with his fair doth .... So7i 21 4 

every vulgar paper to rehearse " 38 4 

as my poor name rehearse " 71 11 

your being shall rehearse " 81 11 

Reign — For when love reigns V A 649 

And there reigns love Son 31 3 

and in their badness reign " 121 14 

in the general bosom reign L C 127 

Reign — which in thy reign are made P i 804 

beauty's wreck and grim care's 

reign " 1451 

enemies to either's reign Son 28 5 

Reign'd— though in my nature .... " 109 9 

And reign'd commanding L C 196 

Rein — And rein his proud head V A 14 

the lusty courser's rein " 31 

Breaketh his rein " 264 

master'd with a leathern rein " 392 

or rein his rash desire R L 706 

Rejected — be of thyself rejected V A 159 

Rejoice— joy bids her rejoice " 977 

Rejoicing— more rejoicing to the 

prime RL 332 

Releasing — doth urge releasing V A 256 

thy worth gives thee releasing Son 87 3 

Relenteth — at rain relenteth V A 200 

Relenting — In such relenting dew R L 1829 

Relief—Within this limit is relief 

enough VA 235 

sorrow lends but weak relief Son 34 11 

Rclier— seducing lust, thy rash . . . .R L 639 

Relieved — never relieved by any V A 708 

Relieveth — all the earth relieveth " 484 

Religion — put out Religion's eye L C 250 

Religious — Hath dear religious love 6'o?i 31 6 

Eeligious love put out Religion's LC 250 

Relish— Relish your nimble notes R L 1126 

Remain— doth always fresh remain F^ 801 

What face remains alive " 1076 



Remain — that yet remains upon her 

breast RL 463 

surviving husband shall remain " 519 

lawful policy remains " 529 

despite of cure, remain " 732 

remains a hopeless castaway " 744 

their unseen sin remain untold " 753 

in a rough-grown grove, remain " 1249 

no semblance did remain " 1453 

blots that do with me remain Son 36 3 
him here who doth hence remain " 39 14 
This with thee remains " 74 14 
above that idle rank remain " 122 3 
with him in thoughts, or to re- 
main L C 129 

much less of shame in me remain " 188 

and both in thee remain P P 8 14 
More in women than in men re- 
main " 18 18 
If what parts can so remain P T 48 

Reniaiu'd — still pure and red .... Pi 1742 

which remain'd the foil L C 153 

Reniaineth — .... in one place VA 885 

Remaining — too long with her R L 1572 

Remedy — The remedy indeed to do 

me good " 1028 

for this sin there is no remedy Son 62 3 

a bath and healthful remedy " 154 11 

Remember — read this line, .... not " 71 5 

an adjunct to remember thee " 122 13 

Renieniber'd — 0, be remember'd, no 

outrageous R L 607 

remember'd not to be Son 3 13 
For thy sweet love remember'd " 29 13 
of thee to be remember'd " 74 12 
night of woe might have re- 
member'd " 120 9 

Remembrance — no .... what it was " 5 12 

I summon up remembrance " 30 2 

Remission — rebel for ... . prays P L 714 

Remorse — ' some favour, some ... . VA 257 

have remorse in poor abuses P L 269 

Remorseless — In the wrinkles " 562 

Remote — From limits far remote Son 44 4 

Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T 29 

Remove — never to remove V A 81 

I must remove " 186 

Remove your siege " 423 

fear of this thy will remove P L 614 

may not remove nor be removed Son 25 14 

with the remover to remove " 116 4 

and did thence remove L C 237 

a way is placed without remove PP 18 12 

Removed — not remove nor be .... Son 25 14 

But things removed that hidden " 31 8 

earth removed from thee " 44 6 

And yet this time removed " 97 5 

Remover — with the to remove " 116 4 

Removing — past reason's weak R L 243 

Render — the wronger till he render 

right " 943 

But mutual render only me for 

thee Son 125 12 

her quietus is to render thee " 126 12 

when I myself must render L C 221 

Renew — but her passion's strength 

renews P L 1103 

Sweet love, renew thy force Son 56 1 

Renew'd — and wish I were renew'd "111 8 



RENEWEST 



238 



RESTLESS 



Eencwest — if now thou not . . . , Son 3 3 

Renown — farewell his great .... P P 21 48 

Rent — by paying too much rent Son 125 6 

beds' revenues of their rents " 142 8 

in top of rage the lines she rents i C 55 

Renying — Heart's renying PP 18 7 

Repair — Whose fresh repair if now Son 3 3 

Which to repair should be " 10 8 

lines of life that life repair " 16 9 

To this urn let those repair P T 65 

Repay — your great deserts repay Son 117 2 

Repeal — for exiled majesty's repeal li L 640 

Repeat — He doth again repeat " 1848 

Repel — must not repel a lover V A 573 

Repent — Though thou repent, yet I 

have Son 34 10 

too late, she will repent P P 19 15 

Repentant — wrapp'd in . . , . cold RL 48 

repentant tears ensue the deed " 502 

Repetition — repetition of her moans F^ 831 

repetition cannot make it less R L 1285 

Repine — with his brows repine V A 490 

Replenish — the blood his cheeks. .. .P i 1357 

Replete — replete with too much rage ^Sbra 23 3 
Incapable of more, replete with 

you " 113 13 

Replication — All replication prompti C 122 

Replied — ere I was up,' replied the 

maid R L 1277 

Reply — Thus she replies V A 385 

spend their mouths ; Echo replies " 695 

and he replies with howling " 918 

Thus he replies: 'The colour R L 477 

Eeplies her husband, 'do not take " 1790 

Report — mine is thy good report So7i 36 14 

have I slejjt in your report " 83 5 

thy name blesses an ill report " 95 8 

mine is thy good report " 96 14 

Repose — against repose and rest R L 757 

thou gavest me to repose " 933 

The dear repose for limbs Son 27 2 

and that repose to say " 50 3 

Reposed— might have reposed still R L 382 

Reprehend — think to reprehend her F^4 470 

reprehends her mangling eye " 1065 

Reproacli — Reproach, disdain and 

deadly enmity R L 503 

Thou back'st reproach against " 622 

reproach to Tarquin's shame " 816 

And undeserved reproach " 824 

Eeproach is stanip'd " 829 

and death reproach's debtor " 1155 

receives reproach of being Son 121 2 
By how much of me their reproach 

contains L C 1S9 

Reprobate — By reprobate desire R L 300 

Reproof— But as reproof and reason " 489 

Reprove — that I cannot reprove VA 787 

Reproving — but denial and .... R L 242 

it merits not reproving Son 142 4 

Reputation — fair .... but a bawd R L 623 

that senseless reputation " 820 

Request — request to know your 

heaviness " 1283 

At this request, with noble " 1695 

Requiem — the .... lack his right P T 16 

Require — services to do till you .... Son 57 4 

Resemble — peasants did so well . ...R L 1392 

as your sweet self resemble Son 114 6 



Resembling — idle sounds resembling 

parasites VA 848 

Eesembling well his pale cheeks " 1169 

resembling dew of night R L 396 

Resembling strong youth Son 7 6 

Resembling sire and child " 8 11 

Reserve — Reserve them for my love " 32 7 
Reserve their character " 85 3 

Reserved — Reserved the stalk and 

gave him all my flower L C 147 

Resign— Where they resign V A 1039 

Resistance— made him fret " 69 

to resistance did belong R L 1265 

Resisteth — now no more resisteth T',4 563 

Resolution — willisback'd with . . .. R L 352 

My resolution, love, shall be thy 

boast " 1193 

My resolution, husband, do thou 
take " 1200 

Resolved — She is resolved no longer F. 4 579 

resolved my reason into tears L C 296 

Resolving— to obtain his will R L 129 

Resound — resounds like heaven's 

thunder F^4 268 

How sighs resound P P 18 34 

Resounding — ill-resounding noise V A 919 

Resort — fools to mock at him resort R L 989 

graces that to thee resort Son 96 4 

Respect — Full of respects F^4 911 

a true respect should have R L 201 

Respect and reason wait " 275 

true respect will prison false desire " 642 

creatures have a true respect " 1347 

worthy of thy sweet respect Son 26 12 

there is but one respect " 36 5 

Call'd to that audit by advised re- 
spects " 49 4 

Respect — others for the breath of 

words resjiect " 85 13 

What merit do I in myself respect " 149 9 

Respecting — nought at all ... . VA 911 

nor mothers' groans respecting R L 431 

Best — beats, and takes no rest F^4 647 

to be barr'd of rest " 784 

the gentle lark, weary of rest " 853 

in this hollow cradle take thy rest " 1185 

to rest themselves betake R L 125 

exclaims against repose and rest " 757 

Disturb his hours of rest " 974 

loves no stops nor rests " 1114 

debarr'd the benefit of rest Son 28 2 

that doth my rest defeat " 61 11 

that seals up all in rest " 73 8 

in love with love's ill rest P P 1 8 

Good night, good rest " 14 1 

that kept my rest away " 14 2 

each moving sense from idle rest " 15 3 

Rest — protestation urged the rest R L 1844 

And all the rest forgot Son 25 12 

a joy above the rest " 91 6 

doubting of the rest " 115 12 

Rest— I rest thy secret friend R L 526 

want to rest thy weary head " 1621 

So should my shame still rest upon 

record " 1643 

To eternity doth rest P T 58 

Restful — for restful death I cry Son 66 1 

Restless — with restless trances R L 974 

My restless discord loves " 1124 



RESTING 



239 



RIGHT 



Besting — For never-resting time 

leads summer on Son 5 5 

Restore — Thou wilt restore, to be 

my comfort " 134 4 

mine did liim restore L C 301 

Restored — All losses are restored Son 80 14 

Restrain — no longer to ... . him VA 579 

■which late this mutiny restrains E L 426 

Rest)' — Else, resty Muse, my love's 

sweet face Son 100 9 

Re-survey — Aud shalt t>y fortune 

once more re-survey " 32 3 

Retention— That poor could " 122 9 

Retire — But back retires to rate the 

boar VA 906 

oft betake him to retire R L 174 

by him enforced, retires his ward " 303 

That to his borrow'd bed he make 

retire " 573 

and flattering thoughts retire " 641 

Retire again, till meeting " 1441 

Retiring' — One poor retiring minute " 962 

Return — Turn, aud return V A 704 

return again in haste R L 321 

Let him return, and flattering " 641 

return to make amends " 961 

till he return again " 1359 

How can I then return Son 28 1 

Till I return, of posting " 51 4 

Return of love, more blest " 56 12 

Return, forgetful Muse " 100 5 

Like him thattravels, I return again " 109 6 
So I return rebuked " 119 13 

Return'd — messengers from thee " 45 10 

Revealing— Revealing day through 

every cranny R L 1086 

Revels — Love keeps his revels V A 123 

For there it revels R L 713 

Revenge — As in revenge or quittal " 236 

Revenge on him that made me " 1180 

Her blood, in poor revenge " 1736 

Is it revenge to give thyself " 1823 

We will revenge the death " 1841 

Revenge upon myself Son 149 8 

Revenged — thou revenged mayst he R L 1194 

Be suddenly revenged on my foe " 1683 

And live to be revenged " 1778 

Revengeful — injustice with .... arms " 1693 

Revenue — beds' of their rents Son 142 8 

Reverend — And reverend welcome RL 90 

A reverend man that grazed L C 57 

Reviewest — When thou reviewest 

this, thou dost review Son 74 5 

Revive — coal revives with wind VA 338 

Reviveth — love by looks reviveth " 464 

Reviving— For now reviving joy " 977 

Revolt— on thy revolt doth lie Son 92 10 

Revolution — revolution be the same " 59 12 

Revolving — doth Tarquin lie ... . R Z 127 

Reward — Reward not hospitality " 575 

Rewarded — whose concave womb 

rewarded L C 1 

Rlietoric — touches rhetoric can lend &>?!. 82 10 
heavenly rhetoric of thine eye PP 3 1 

Rheumatic — despised , and cold F^ 135 

Rhyme — trespass cited up in rhymes P i/ 524 

more blessed than my barren 

rhyme Son 16 4 

in it and in my rhyme " 17 14 



Rhyme — for my love, not for their 

rhyme Son 32 7 

shall outlive this powerful rhyme " 55 2 

making beautiful old rhyme " 106 3 

I'll live in this poor rhyme " 107 11 

Rliynier— those old nine which rhy- 
mers invocate " .38 10 

Ricli — For rich caparisons VA 286 

draw his lii^s' rich treasure " 552 

Rich preys make true men " 724 

Pluck down the rich " 1150 

Of that rich jewel he should keep R L ,34 

envy of so rich a thing " 39 

But, poorly rich, so wanteth " 97 

bankrupt in this poor-rich gain " 140 

ere rich at home he lands " 336 

Sets you most rich in youth So?i 15 10 
with earth and sea's rich gems "21 6 , 
to one more rich in hope " 29 5 
And they are rich " 34 14 
So am I as the rich " 52 1 
Than this rich praise " 84 2 
big with rich increase " 97 6 
merchandized whose rich esteem- 
ing " 102 S 
So thou, being rich in ' Will " 135 11 
without be rich no more " 146 12 

Rich-built— Of rich-built Ilion P L 1524 

Richer — Richer than wealth, proud- 
er than garments' cost Son 91 10 

Riches — And for that I'iches " 87 6 

And husband nature's riches " 94 6 

Richest — by spirits of richest coat L C 236 

Richly — of your praise, richly com- 
piled ^ Son 85 2 

Ricli-prond — The rich-proud cost " 64 2 

Rid — to rid me of this shame R L 1031 

outright with looks, aud rid my 

pains Son 139 14 

Ride — permit the basest clouds to ride " 33 5 

upon your soundless deep doth ride " 80 10 

in the bay where all men ride " 137 6 
her levelFd eyes their carriage 

ride L C 22 

Well could he ride, and often " 106 

Rider— To tie the rider VA 40 

his rider's angry stir " 283 

Save a proud rider " 300 

His rider loved not speed Son 50 8 

his mettle from his rider takes L C 107 

Ridge— Whose ridges with the meet- 
ing clouds VA 820 

With swelling ridges; and their 

ranks RL 1439 

Ridiculous — makes thee ridiculous F^ 988 

Rifled— Chastity is of her store P L 692 

hath Tarquin rifled me " 1050 

Riglit— by the rights of time VA 759 

and 'tis thy right " 1184 

from world's minority their right P L 67 

beast that knows no gentle right " 545 

at right, at law, at reason " 880 

the wronger till he render right " 943 

doth me no right " 1027 

By all our country rights " 1838 

your true rights be term'd Son 17 11 

the freedom of that right " 46 4 

And my heart's right " 46 14 

The right of sepulchres " 68 6 



RIGHT 



240 



ROSE 



Eight— That for thy right Son 88 14 

your own dear-purchased right "117 6 

Lest the requiem lack his right P T 16 

That the turtle saw his right " 34 

Right— Q^-D. thy right hand V A 158 

And right perfection wrongfully 

disgraced Son 63 7 

or changes right or wrong " 112 8 

in others seem right gracious " 135 7 

In things right true " 137 13 

The better angel is a man right fair " 144 3 

Their view right on L C 26 

My better angel is a man right fair PP 2 3 

Right — cannot right her cause V A 220 

should right poor ladies' harms " 1694 

Kightful— No rightful plea might 

plead R L 1649 

Rightly— They rightly do inherit Son 94 5 

Klgol— a watery rigol goes R L 1745 

Rigour — ruin'd with thy rigour V A 954 

blunt rage and rigour roll'd R L 1398 

then use rigour in my gaol Son 133 12 

Ring — rings sadly in her ear V A 889 

rings out the doleful knell R L 1495 

breaking rings a-twain L C 6 

a ring of posied gold and bone " 45 

My wether's bell rings doleful 
knell PP 18 28 

Ringing — Once set on ringing R L 1494 

By ringing in thy lady's ear PP 19 28 

Riot— and too full of riot VA 1147 

in their riot even there Son 41 11 

Ripe— That did my ripe thoughts " 86 3 

Riper — But as the riper should "13 

in growth of riper days " 102 8 

Ripe-red — and ripe-red cherries V A 1103 

Rise — Will never rise so he will 

kiss her " 480 

for thou shalt not rise " 710 

fear did make her colour rise R L 257 

itself to death, rise up and fall " 466 

Rise, resty Muse, my love's sweet 

face survey Son 100 9 

dear love I rise and fall " 151 14 

Rise — My heart doth charge the 

watch ; the morning rise PP 15 2 

Rising — Round rising hillocks I'.4 237 

But rising at thy name Son 151 9 

Rite — ceremony of love's rite " 23 6 

River— Rain added to a river VA 71 

is stopp'd, or river stay'd " 331 

In two slow rivers R L 1738 

a river running from a fount L C 283 

By shallow rivers by whose falls P P 20 7 

one by one she in a river threw L C 38 

Hoiirlng — the violent roaring tide R L 1667 

Bob- To rob thee of a kiss V A 723 

to rob him of his fair " 1086 

which sourly robs from 111 ■ Son 35 14 

He robs thee of, and pays it thee " 79 8 

Bobb'd— robb'd of his effect VA 1132 

But robb'd and ransact'd R L 838 

And when the judge is robb'd " 1652 

Robb'd others' beds' revenues Son 142 8 

Robbery — I do forgive thy robbery " 40 9 

And to his robbery had anuex'd " 99 11 

Robbing— Robbing no old to dress " 68 12 

Robe — wardrobe which the robe 

doth hide " 52 10 



Rock — rock thee day and night V A 1186 

Huge rocks, high winds R L 335 

When rocks impregnable Son 65 7 

There will we sit upon the rooks P P 20 5 

Rock'd — and then it faster rock'd R L 262 

Rocky — rocky and wreck -threat- 
ening heart " 590 

What rocky heart to water will 

not wear L C 291 

Roe — Or as the fleet-foot roe VA 561 

Or at the roe " 676 

Roll— Deep woes roll forward RL 1118 

Roll'd — blunt rage and rigour roll'd " 1398 

Rolling— Rolling his greedy eyeballs " 368 

less false in rolling Son 20 5 

Roman — leaves the Roman host R L 3 

welcomed by the Roman dame " 51 

The Roman lord mareheth " 301 

shakes aloft his Roman blade " 505 

Awake, thou Roman dame " 1628 

He with the Romans . " 1811 

Courageous Roman, do not steep " 1828 

To rouse our Roman gods " 1831 

The Romans plausibly did give " 1854 

Rome— this faultful lord of Rome " 715 

never be forgot in mighty Rome " 1644 

thou wronged lord of Rome " 1818 

Since Rome herself on them " 1833 

country rights in Rome maintained " 1838 

her bleeding body thorough Rome " 1851 

Rondure — in this huge .... hems Son 21 8 
Roof— that beauteou.s roof to ruinate " 10 7 
Room — your praise shall still find 

room " 55 10 

Root — Would root these beauties as 

he roots the mead V A 636 

root out the work of masonry Son 55 6 
Root pity in thy heart " 142 11 

Root — wither at the cedar's root R L 665 

of another root are rotted " 823 

take root with precious flowers " 870 

Rose — than doves or roses are VA 10 

prisoner in a red-rose chain " 110 

What though the rose " 574 

upon the blushing rose " 590 

Gloss on the rose " 936 

war of lilies and of roses R L 71 

First red as roses " 2.58 

white as lawn the roses took away " 259 

And the red rose blush " 479 

thorns the growing rose defends " 492 

beauty's rose might never die Son 1 2 
Roses have thorns and silver foun- 
tains mud " .35 2 
The rose looks fair " 54 3 
perfumed tincture of the roses " 54 6 
Sweet roses do not so " 54 11 
Roses of shadow, since his rose " 67 8 
a canker in the fragrant rose " 95 2 
the deep vermillion in the rose " 98 10 
The roses fearfully on thorns " 99 8 
Save thou, my rose " 109 14 
I have seen roses damask'd " 130 5 
But no such roses see I " 1.30 6 

with crystal gate the glowing roses L C 286 

Sweet rose, fair flower PP 10 1 

make thee a bed of roses " 20 9 

Rose — And ere I rose was Tarquin R L 1281 

He rose and ran away P P 4 14 



ROSE-CHEEK'D 



241 



SAD 



Eose-cheek'd — Kose-cheek'd Adonis 

hied him VA 3 

Rosy— her rosy cheek lies under Ji L 386 

though rosy lips and cheeks Son 116 9 

Kot — Rot and consume themselves VA 132 

Rotted — of another root are rotted JR L 823 

Rotten — With rotten damps ravish " 778 

Shall rotten death make conquest " 1767 

in their rotten smoke Son 34 4 

■when I in earth am rotten " 81 2 
Rough— brakes obscure and rough V A 237 

Rough bear or lion proud 

To tlie rough beast 

But chide rough winter 

Rough winds do shake 
Rough-groiTn — In men, as i 

rough-grown grove 
Round — Round rising hillocks 

round enchanting jjits 

Which in round drops 



RL 



884 
545 

" 1255 

Son 18 3 



RL 
VA 



1249 
237 
247 
1170 

Left their round turrets destitute R L 441 

And turn the giddy round " 952 

her eyes about the painting round " 1499 

Tliose round clear pearls of liis " 1553 

And round about her tear-distained " 1586 

to round me on th' ear P P 19 51 

Rovnd — on this mortal round R L 368 

What rounds, what bounds L C 109 

Round-hoof d — Round-hoof 'd, short- 
jointed VA 295 

Rouse — No dog shall rouse thee " 240 

To rouse our Roman gods R L 1831 

Rousetli — He rouseth up himself " 541 

Rubbing — As vaded gloss no rub- 



PP 

LC . 

VA . 
RL . 



13 8 



Son 



11 
32 

78 
129 



bing will refresh 
Ruby — and rubies red as blood 
Ruby-colour'd — tlie .... portal 
Rude — by brain-sick rude desire 

Rude ram, to batter 

Harsh, featureless, and rude 

These poor rude lines 

learning my rude ignorance 

Savage, extreme, rude, cruel 
Rudeness — His rudeness so with his 

authorized youth L C 

Rudely — his mantle rudely o'er his 

arm R L 

shall rudely t^ar thee " 

maiden virtue rudely strumpeted Son 66 
Rudest — the rudest or gentlest sight " 113 

Rufilan — The staring ruffian VA 

Rufdu — blusterer that the ruffle 

knew LC 58 

Ruin — To whose weak ruins muster J2 i 720 

Time's ruin, beauty's wreck " 1451 

Ruin has taught me thus Son 64 11 
Ruinate — To proud buildings R L 944 

that beauteous roof to ruinate Son 10 7 
Buin'd — ruin'd with tliy rigour VA 954 

Bare ruin'd choirs, where late Son 73 4 

And ruin'd love when it is built " 119 11 
Ruining — more short than waste or 



170 

669 

6 

9 

1149 



ruining 
Rule— Could rule them both 
'gainst rule, 'gainst sense 
Let reason rule things worthy 
Ruled— Thus he that overruled 
overs way 'd 
be ruled by me 

16 



125 4 



VA 


.... 1008 


LC 


.... 271 


PP 


19 3 


VA 


.... 109 


" 


.... 673 



Ruminate — taught me thus to ... . Son 64 U 

Run — Whether he run or fly VA .304 

Sometime he runs " 685 

harmony should run " 781 

through the dark lawnd runs " 813 

And as she runs " 871 

This way she runs " 905 

He runs and chides R L 742 

let the thief run mad " 997 

Towards thee I'll run Son 51 14 

careful housewife runs to catch " 143 1 

kiss and clip me till I run away P P 11 14 

Ruiin'st— So runn'st thou after that Soti 143 9 

Running — a river .... from a fount L C 283 

Rush — And forth she rushes VA 262 

through whom he rushes " 630 

from the rushes where it lies R L 318 

Rushing — Rushing from forth a 

cloud " 373 

Rust— Foul-cankering rust VA 767 

Busty — and yet as iron rusty P P y 4 

Ruth — Looking with pretty ruth Son 132 4 

a spectacle of ruth P P 9 11 
Ruthless — Ruthless beasts they will 

not cheer thee " 21 22 

Sable— sable Night, mother of dread iZi 117 

My sable ground of sin " 1074 

sable curls all silver'd o'er Son 12 4 

That thy sable gender makest P T 18 

Sack'd — Her house is sack'd R L 1170 

Who, like a late-sack'd island " 1740 

Sacred — Her sacred temple spotted " 1172 

Serving with looks his sacred ma- 
jesty Son 7 4 
Tan sacred beauty " 115 7 
power to charm a sacred nun L C ..... 260 

Sad — at these sad signs VA 929 

Which struck her sad R L 262 

Sad pause and deep regard " 277 

Her sad behaviour feeds " 556 

with slow-sad gait descended " 1081 

Sad souls are slain in merry com- 
pany " 1110 

Make thy sad grove " 1129 

So I at each sad strain " 1131 

stern, sad tunes to change their 

kinds " 1147 

in that sad hour of mine " 1179 

And sorts a sad look " 1221 

To see sad sights moves more " 1324 

see those far-otf eyes look sad " 1386 

On this sad shadow " 1457 

set a- work, sad tales doth tell " 1496 

So sober-sad, so weary " 1542 

in her sad face he stares " 1591 

With sad attention long " 1610 

Begins the sad dirge " 1612 

her sad task hath not said " 1699 

sad account of fore-bemoaned 

moan Son 30 11 

and straight grow sad " 45 14 

Let this sad interim " 56 9 

like a sad slave, stay and think " 57 11 

sad mortality o'er-sway " 65 2 

And tlie sad augurs mock " 107 6 

a sad distemper'd guest " 163 12 

O, that sad breath L C 326 

Herald sad and trumpet be P T 3 



SAD-BEHOLDING 



242 



SAVE 



Sad-beholding— her sad-beholding 

husband saw JJ L 1590 

Saddle-bow — to the saddle-bow V A 14 

Sadly — rings sadly in her ear " 889 

another sadly scowling " 917 

pity-pleading eyes are sadly fixed RL 561 

thievish dog creeps sadly thence " 736 

when sadly she had laid " 1212 

why hear'st thou music sadly Son 8 1 

letters sadly penned in blood L C 47 

Sadness — Therefore, in sadness, now 

I will away VA 807 

Sad-set — sad-set eyes and wretched 

arms R L 1662 

Sad-tuned — to list the .... tale L C 4 

Safest — With safest distance " 151 

Sage — this sorrow to the sage RL 222 

deep regard beseems the sage " 277 

Said — This said, impatience chokes VA 217 

sorrow may be said " 333 

if she said 'No " 852 

This said, she hasteth " 865 

This said, his guilty hand R L 358 

This said, he shakes aloft " 505 

This said, he sets his foot " 673 

as grant what he hath said " 915 

This said, from her be-tumbled 

couch " 1037 

She would have said " 1535 

her sad task hath not said " 1699 

could distinguish what he said " 1785 

This said, he struck his hand " 1842 

And yet it may be said Son 42 2 

renew thy force ; be it not said " 56 1 

those that said I could not love " 115 2 

the sound that said ' I hate " 145 2 

This said, in top of rage L C 55 

to none was ever said " 180 

This said, his watery eyes " 281 

Have you not heard it said P P 19 41 
Yet will she blush, here be it said " 19 53 

Sail — as the proudest sail doth bear Son 80 6 

Was it the proud full sail " 86 1 

That I have hoisted sail " 117 7 

Saint — This earthly saint, adored R L 85 

corrupt my saint to be a devil Son 144 7 

corrupt my saint to be a devil P P 2 7 

To sin and never for to saint " 19 44 

Saint-like — Or blot with hell-born 

sin such saint-like forms R L 1519 

Saitli— Saith that the world VA 12 

He saith she is immodest " 53 

' Fondling,' she saith " 229 

' Give me my hand,' saith he " 373 

' Give me my heart,' saith she " 374 

shall I say mine eye saith truth Son 114 3 

Sake — And for my sake VA 105 

and thy children's sake R L 533 

for his sake spare me " 582 

for thine own sake leave me " 583 

And for my sake " 1197 

And for my sake " 1681 

And for my sake Son 42 7 

for my sake to approve her " 42 8 

And both for my sake " 42 12 

watchman ever for thy sake " 61 12 

O, for my sake do you " 111 1 
a friend came debtor for my sake " 134 11 

that languish'd for her sake " 143 3 



Sake — all tyrant, for thy sake 
should do again for such a sake 
For Adon's sake 

Salt — my salt tears gone 
To their salt sovereign 

Salt-waved— Who in a ocean 

Salutation — Give salutation to my 



Son 149 4 

LC 322 

PP 9 4 

VA 1071 

R L 650 

" «... 1231 
ialutation to my 

sportive blood Son 21 6 

Salute — Venus salutes him VA 859 

Salve — Earth's sovereign salve " 28 

To see the salve doth make R L 1116 

well of such a salve can speak Son 34 7 

salve which wounded bosoms fits " 120 12 

Salving — salving thy amiss " 35 7 
Same — in the self-same seat sits Col- 

latine R L 289 

and if the same " 600 

The same disgrace which they " 751 

for the self-same purpose seek " 1047 

and back the same grief draw " 1673 

tyrants to the very same Son 5 3 

even by the self-same sky " 15 6 

For that same groan " 50 13 

whether revolution be the same " 59 12 

But those same tongues " 09 6 

still all one, ever the same " 76 5 

each day say o'er the very same " IDS 6 

That the self was not the same P T 38 

Sanctified— Or sister sanctified L C 233 

Sand — Dance on the sands V A 148 

strong pirates, shelves, and sands RL 335 

Sang — where late the sweet birds 

sang Son 73 4 
Sap — Green-dropping sap, which she 

compares V A 1176 

To dry the old oak's sap R L 950 

leaves will wither and his sap decay " 1168 

Sap check'd with frost Son 5 7 

Vaunt in their youthful sap " 15 7 

Sapphire — The heaven-hued .... L C 215 

Sappy — Sappy plants to bear V A 165 

Sat — before him as he sat " 349 

again desires her, being sat L C 66 

Satiety — And yet not cloy thy lips 

with loathed satiety V A 19 

Satire — If any, be a satire to decay Son 100 11 

Satisfaction — Nor gives it L C 162 

Satisfied — by the conquest satisfied R L 422 

Satisfy — all could not satisfy " 96 

Saturn— That heavy Saturn laugh'd &i» 98 4 

Saace — To bitter sauces did I frame " 118 6 

Saucily — while others saucily R L 1348 

Saucy — My saucy bark inferior far Son 80 7 

Since saucy jacks so happy are " 128 13 

Savage — Savage, extreme, rude, cruel " 129 4 

Save — Save a proud rider V A 300 

Save sometime too much wonder R L 95 

Save thieves and cares " 126 

Save of their lord " 409 

Yet save that labour " 1290 

save to the eye of mind " 1426 

Save breed, to brave him Son 12 14 

Save that my soul's imaginary sight " 27 9 

Save where thou art not " 48 10 

Save, where you are " 57 12 

Save that to die I leave my love " 66 14 

Save what is had " 75 12 

Save thou, my rose " 109 14 

save in thy deeds " 131 13 



SAVE 



243 



SCHEDULE 



SaTC — Save the nightingale alone P P 21 8 

Save the eagle, feather'd king P T 11 

Saved — And saved my life Son 145 14 

Savour — savour, hue, and qualities V A 747 

foregoing simple savour Son 125 7 

Saw — His eyes saw her eyes V A 357 

But when he saw his love " 393 

that helpless berries saw "• 604 

Ne'er saw the beauteous livery " 1107 

The more she saw the blood R L 1357 

he saw them quake and tremble " 1393 

her sad-beholding husband saw " 1590 

I never saw that you Son 83 1 

Since first I saw you fresh " 104 8 

when I saw myself to win " 119 4 

I never saw a goddess go " 130 11 

when she saw my woeful state " 145 4 

might think sometime it saw L C 10 

Each eye that saw him " 89 

Saw how deceits were gilded " 172 

he saw more wounds than one P P 9 13 

the turtle saw his right P T 34 

Saw division grow together " 42 

Saw — a sentence or an old man's saw R L 244 

his sighs, his sorrows make a saw " 1672 

Saw'st — thou not signs of fear V A 644 

Saivu — What largeness thinks in 

Paradise was sawn L C 91 

Say — what shall she say V A 253 

As who should say " 280 

or his ' Stand, I say " 284 

For lovers say the heart " 329 

Say, that the sense " 439 

May say, the plague " 510 

Say, for non-payment " 521 

' Now let me say, " Good-night," 

and so say you " 535 

if you will say so " 536 

and ere he says ' Adieu " 537 

' Sweet boy,' she says " 583 

Say, shall we? shall we? wilt thou " 586 

' Fie, fie,' he says " 611 

more I dare not say " 805 

She says "Tis so " 851 

And would say after her " 852 

And says, within her bosom " 1173 

As who should say RL 320 

foul sin may say " 629 

She says her subjects " 722 

that we can say is ours " 873 

but stoutly say ' So be it " 1209 

What should I say " 1291 

all the task it hath to say " 1618 

at once began to say " 1709 

' He, he,' she says " 1717 

The father says 'She's mine " 1795 

let no mourner say " 1797 

To say, within thine own Son 2 7 

let your son say so " 13 14 
Or say With princes if it shall go 

well " 14 7 
age to come would say " 17 7 
wilt thou not haply say " 21 5 
Let them say more that like " 21 13 
forget to say " 23 5 
How would, I say, mine eyes " 43 9 
And says in him thy fair appear- 
ance lies "46 8 
and that repose to say "50 3 



Say — the old world could say Son 59 9 

O, if, I say, you look " 71 9 

which he doth say " 79 13 
Who is it that says most? which 

can say more " 84 1 

you praised, I say ' 'Tis so " 85 9 

Say that thou didst forsake " 89 1 

Some say, thy fault is youth " 96 1 

Some say, thy grace is youth " 96 2 

say o'er the very same " 108 6 

0, never say that I " 109 1 

Or whether shall I say "114 3 

Might I not then say " 115 10 

then might I not say so " 115 13 

Since my appeal says I did strive " 117 13 

every tongue says beauty " 127 14 

some say that thee behold " 131 5 

To say they err " 131 7 

say this is not " 137 11 

But wherefore says she " 138 9i 

And wherefore say not " 138 10 

to say it is not so " 148 6 

say I love thee not "149 1 

' Father,' she says, ' though in me L C 71 

often men would say " 106 

what he would say " 132 

For further I could say " 169 

But wherefore says my love P P 1 9 

And wherefore say not I " 1 10 

say thou lovest her well " 19 11 

ban and brawl, and say thee nay " 19 20 

taught her thus to say " 19 22 
Saying — Saying, som-e shape in 

Sinon's was abused R L 1529 

saved my life, saying ' not you Son 145 14 

Scale — as his hand did scale R L 440 

am I come to scale " 481 

weighs down the airy scale of 

praise L C 226 

Scalp— The scalps of many R L 1413 

Scandal — the scandal will survive " 204 

Thou plantest scandal " 887 

For greatest scandal waits " 1006 

Which vulgar scandal stamp'd Son 112 2 

Scant — if store of crowns be scant P P 21 37 

Scanted— that I have scanted all Son 117 1 

'Scape — nigh t's 'scapes doth open lay P £ 747 

Could 'scape the hail L C 310 

'Scaped — my heart hath 'scaped Son 90 5 

'Scapetli— battle ... .by the flight LG 244 

Scar — The scar that will, despite R L 732 

crest-wounding private scar " 828 

The scars of battle 'scapeth L C 244 

Scarce — And scarce hath eyes R L 857 

duteous vassal scarce is gone " 1360 

Scarce had the sun dried up P P 6 1 

And scarce the herd gone "62 

Scarce I could from tears refrain " 21 16 

Scarcely — And scarcely greet me Son 49 6 

Scarcity — would breed a scarcity V A 753 

Scarlet — His scarlet lust came R L 1650 

profaned their scarlet ornaments Son 142 6 

Scatter — They scatter and unloose it P i 136 

Scene — As chorus to their tragic P T 52 

Scent-snufflng— hot .... hounds VA 692 

Sceptre — with the sceptre straight 

be strucken down R L 217 

Schedule — By this short schedule " 1312 

Of folded schedules had she many L C 43 



SCHOOL 



244 



SEE 



School — the glass, the . . . . , the book It L 615 

And wilt thou be the school " 617 

in skill-coutendii.ig schools " 1018 

thy long-experienced wit to school " 1820 

Scope— Desiring this man's art and 

that man's scope Son 29 7 

whose worthiness gives scope " 52 13 

The scope and tenour " 61 8 

That having such a scope " 103 2 

which wondrous scope affords " 105 12 

Scorch — which fond desire doth . ...R L 314 

Score — thy dear love to score Son 122 10 

Scorn — love he laugh'd to scorn V A 4 

smiles at thee in scorn " 252 

I murder shameful scorn R L 1189 

In scorn of nature " 1374 

my merit in the eye of scorn Son 88 2 
In scorn or friendship P P 14 8 

That which with scorn she put away " 19 18 

Scorn — scorns the heat he feels V A 311 

The sun doth scorn j'ou " 1084 

Patience seem'd to scorn his woes R L 1505 

That then I scorn to change Son 29 14 

All fears scorn I P P 18 20 

Scorn'd — Be scorn'd like old men Son 17 10 

Scornful — taught them .... tricks VA 501 

The scornful mark of every open 

eye R L 520 

Scornfully— glisters like fire VA 275 

Then looking scornfully R L 187 

Scorning — Scorning his churlish 

drum VA 107 

scorning it should pass " 982 

Scowl — He scowls and hates himself P i 738 

Scowling — another sadly scowling V A 917 

Scrap — disdained scraps to give R L 987 

Scratcli — briar his weary legs doth 

scratch V A 705 

to scratch her wicked foe R L 1035 

scratch out the angry eyes " 1469 

Scratch'd — Shaking their .... ears VA 924 

Scroll— Receives the scroll R L 1340 

Scud — he scuds far off V A 301 

Scythe — 'gainst Time's can make &« 12 13 

but for his scythe to mow " 60 12 

his scythe and crooked knife " 100 14 

despite thy scythe and thee " 123 14 

Scytlied — Time had not scythed L C 12 

Sea— The sea hath bounds VA 389 

a sea, a sovereign king R L 652 

Thy sea within a puddle's womb " 657 

the puddle in thy sea dispersed " 658 

deep-drenched in a sea of care " 1100 

with earth and sea's rich gems Son 21 6 
can jump both sea and land " 44 7 

nor earth, nor boundless sea " 65 1 

The mountain or the sea " 113 11 

The sea, all water " 135 9 

Seal — Pure lips, sweet seals V A 511 

To stamp the seal of Time R L 941 

She carved thee for her seal Son 11 13 

that seals up all in rest " 73 8 

Seal'd — Her letter now is seal'd . R L 1331 

And seal'd false bonds Son 142 7 

and seal'd to curious secrecy L C 49 

Sealinaf— still to be sealing V A 512 

Seal-manual— Set thy seal-manual " 516 

Seaman — Wreck to the seaman " 454 

Search — search the bottom of annoy P i 1109 



Sear'd — through lattice of sear'd age L C 14 

Season — now the happy season V A 327 

Now serves the season P L 166 

thou point'st the season . " 879 

of dearths, or seasons' quality Son 14 4 

Make glad and sorry seasons " 19 5 

In process of the seasons " 104 6 

Seasoned — Or as sweet-season'd 

showers are to the ground " 75 2 

season'd woe had pelleted with tears i/ C 18 

Seasoning — Seasoning the earth 

with showers R L 796 

Seat — interchange each other's seat " 70 

And in the self-same seat " 289 

thou mightst my seat forbear Son 41 9 

till now never kept seat in one " 105 14 

Seated — deep desert, seated from the 

way P L 1144 

Second — What needs a striking VA 250 

A second fear through all " 903 

To live a second life on second 

head Son 63 7 

Death's second self " 73 8 
The second burthen of a former 

child " 59 4 

Second — Which is not mix'd with sec- 
onds " 125 11 

Secrecy — the subtle-shining secre- 
cies P L 101 

the unseen secrecy of night " 763 

seal'd to curious secrecy L C 49 

Secret — no secret bushes fear R L 88 

I rest thy secret friend " 526 

Thy secret pleasure turns " 890 

smile at thee in secret thought " 1065 

so ensconced his secret evil " 1515 

in secret influence comment Son 15 4 

Secret — A thousand honey secrets V A 16 

To hear her secrets PP 19 54 

Securely— she gives good cheer P L 89 

Seducing— Not to seducing lust " 639 

See— Her help she sees VA 93 

Thou canst not see " 139 

He sees his love, and nothing else 

he sees " 287 

to see him woo her " 309 

He sees her coming " 337 

Who sees his true love " 397 

to hear nor see " 437 

I could not see " 440 

Then shalt thou see " 703 

desire sees best of all " 720 

thou hast no eyes to see " 939 

taught all other eyes to see " 952 

To see his face, the lion " 1093 

If he did see his face " 1109 

weasels shriek to see him there R L 307 

Who sees the lurking serpent " 362 

What could he see " 414 

, I see what crosses my attempt " 491 

That thou shalt see thy state " 644 

• Ere he can see his own abomination " 704 

but that every eye can see " 750 

And time to see one " 986 

to see his friends his foes '• 988 

Lucrece shames herself to see " 1084 

with every thing she sees " 1093 

To see the salve doth make " 1116 

overseen that thou shalt see it " 1206 



SEE 



245 



SEEM'D 



See — tby Lucrece thou wilt see E L 1306 

To see sad sights moves more " 132-1 

he blush'd to see her shame " 1344 

might you see the labouring pioner " 13S0 

see those far-off eyes look sad " 1386 

might you see grave Nestor " 1401 

To see their youthful sons " 1432 

Many she sees where cares " 1445 

she sees a wretched image " 1501 

To see those borrow'd tears " 1549 

see time how slow it creeps " 1575 

can see what once I was " 1764 

sweet Lucrece, live again, and see " 1770 

And see thy blood Son 2 14 
through windows of thine age 

Shalt see " 3 11 

And see the brave day sunk " 12 2 

trees I see barren of leaves " 12 5 

as they see others grow " 12 12 

men can breathe, or eyes can see " 18 13 

you see his skill " 24 5 

Now see what good turns " 24 9 

but what they see " 24 14 

which the blind do see " 27 8 

To see his active child " 37 2 

do mine eyes best see " 48 1 

to see till I see thee ''• 43 13 

When I shall see thee " 49 2 

To-morrow see again " 56 7 

to the banks, that, when they see " 56 11 

That I might see " 59 9 

towers I see down-razed " 64 3 

may see my pleasure " 75 8 

I see a better state " 92 7 

things turn to fair that eyes can see " 95 12 

yet I none could see " 99 14 

I see descriptions " 106 2 

I see their antique pen " 106 7 
if it see the rudest or gentlest sight "113 9 

what we see doth lie " 123 11 

roses see I in her cheeks "130 6 

and see not what they see " 137 2 

see where it lies " 137 3 

what they see aright " 148 4 

sees not till heaven " 148 12 

that can see thou lovest " 149 14 

see just cause to hate " 150 10 

the thing they see " 152 12 

'twixt May and April is to see L C 102 

oftences that abroad you see " 183 

that soul that sees thee P P 5 9 

did I see a fair sweet youth "99 

See, in my thigh,' quoth she " 9 12 

the fair'st that eye could see " 16 3 

For now I see " 18 16 

to see my doleful plight " 18 33 

I see that there is none " 18 54 

And see the shepherds feed " 20 6 

Seed — Seeds spring from seeds V A 167 

Seeded — shame be .... in tliine age R L 603 

Seeing— seeing thee so indeed VA 607 

Seeing his beauty " 938 

seeing thee embrace him R L 518 

Seeing such emulation " 1808 

seeing of his living hue Son 67 6 

. seeing farther than the eye " 69 8 

Seems seeing, but effectually " 113 4 

'tis flattery in my seeing "114 9 

but by others' seeing " 121 4 



Seeing — Or mine eyes seeing this Son 137 11 
Lest eyes well-seeing thy foul faults " 148 14 

Seek — dry again she seeks V A 52 

a thousand ways he seeks " 477 

seek not to know me " 525 

She seeks to kindle " 606 

a pure appeal seeks to the heart R L 293 

by dumb demeanour seeks to show " 474 

Who seek to stain the ocean " 655 

such numbers seek for thee " 896 

seek every hour to kill " 998 

I live, and seek in vain " 1044 

for the self-same purpose seek a 

knife " 1047 

Then what I seek Son 50 2 

poor beauty indirectly seek " 67 7 

art enforced to seek anew " 82 7 

If thou dost seek to have " 142 13 

Seeking — . . . . that beauteous roof " 10 7 

Seem — seem an hour but short V A 23 

so shall the day seem night " 122 

dissolve or seem to melt " 144 

strangeness, seems unkind " 310 

Incorporate then they seem " 540 

hills seem burnish'd gold " 858 

how strange it seems " 985 

makes the wound seem three " 1064 

His face seems twain " 1067 

when it most seems just " 1156 

seems to part in sunder R L 388 

This guilt would seem death-worthy " 635 

And seems to point her out " 1087 

unto her maid seem so " ..... 1217 

seems to pelt and swear " 1418 

Short tiiue seems long " 1573 

Which seems to weep " 1746 

love's strength seem to decay Son 23 7 

May make seem bare " 26 6 

make grief's strength seem stronger " 28 14 
extremity can seem but slow " 51 6 

doth beauty beauteous seem " 54 1 

true love may seem false in this " 72 9 
strainsof woe which now seem woe " 90 13 
with loss of thee will not seem so " 90 14 
May still seem love to me " 93 3 

To make him seem long hence " 101 14 

Such seems your beauty still " 104 3 

Seems seeing, but effectually " 113 4 

and they mourners seem " 127 10 

in others seem right gracious " 135 7 

the sweets that seem so good L C 164 

Thine eye Jove's lightning seems P P 5 11 
each minute seems a morn " 15 15 
Plays not at all, but seems afraid " 18 30 
Truth may seem, but cannot be PT 62 

Seem'd — seem'd with him to bleed V A 1056 

nothing in him seem'd inordinate R L 94 

As heaven, it seem'd, to kiss , " 1372 

Many a dry drop seem'd " 1375 

In speech, it seem'd " 1405 

Which seem'd to swallow up " 1409 

To jump up higher seem'd " 1414 

It seem'd they would debate " 1421 

their light joy seem'd to appear " 1434 

Patience seem'd to scorn his woes " 1505 

that seem'd to welcome woe " 1509 

this abundant issue seem'd to me Son 97 9 
Yet seem'd it winter still " 98 13 

absence seem'd my claim to qualify " 109 2 



SEEM'D 



246 



SENSUAL 



Seem'd — Ink would have seem'd 

more black L C 54 

the web it seem'd to wear " 95 

Seem'st — Thou art not what thou 

seem'st B L 600 

Thou seem'st not what thou art " 601 

Seeiiietli — sorrow seemeth chief V A 970 

when she seemeth drown'd " 984 

Seemeth this concordant one P T 46 

Seeming— Seeming to bury V A 758 

as seeming troubled " 830 

though seeining short " 842 

a show so seeming just iJ L 1514 

being many, seeming one Son 8 13 

though more weak in seeming " 102 1 

best habit is in seeming trust " 138 11 

borrow'd motion seeming owed L C 327 

Seemly— Is but the seemly raiment Son 22 6 

Seen — and yet no footing seen VA 148 

as they had not seen them " 357 

in water seen by night " 492 

lips no more had seen " 504 

have him seen no more " 819 

Her eyes seen in the tears " 962 

Which seen, her eyes " 1031 

immure herself and not be seen " 1194 

in Lucrece' face was seen 22 L 64 

had Narcissus seen her " 265 

Then had they seen " 380 

glorious morning have I seen Son 33 1 

in these black lines be seen " 63 13 

seen by Time's fell liand " 64 1 

I have seen the hungry ocean " 64 5 

seen such interchange " 64 9 

holy antique hours are seen - " 68 9 

errors that in thee are seen " 96 7 

what dark days seen " 97 3 
In process of the seasons have I 

seen " 104 6 

Have I not seen dwellers " 125 5 

I have seen roses damask'd " 130 5 

advice is often seen L C 160 

many that mine eyes have seen " 190 

Distance and no space was seen P T 30 

See'st — What see'st thou in the 

ground VA 118 

Thou see'st our mistress' orna- 
ments R L 322 

Thou see'st the twilight Son 73 5 

thou see'st the glowing " 73 9 

Seething— And grew a seething bath " 153 7 

Seize — Seize love upon thy left VA 158 

Sits Sin, to seize the souls R L 882 

Seized— wolf hath his prey " 677 

he seized on my lips PP 11 9 

Seizetli— With this she seizeth VA 25 

Seizure — on his did act the seizure P P 11 10 

Seld — goods lost are seld or never 

found " 13 7 

Seldom— do seldom dream on evil R L 87 

seldom to themselves appear " 633 

yet it seldom sleeps " 1574 

the fine point of seldom pleasure Son 52 4 
Since, seldom coming, in the long 

year set " 52 6 

Self— Mine enemy was strong, my 

poor self weak R L 1646 

Let my unsounded self " 1819 

to thy sweet self too cruel Son 1 8 



Self— thy sweet self dost deceive Son 4 10 

Make thee another self " 10 13 

to mine own self bring " 39 3 

Self so self-loving were iniquity " 62 12 

Death's second self " 73 8 

as your sweet self resemble " 114 6 

as thy sweet self grow'st " 126 4 

And my next self " 133 6 

thy sweet self prove " 151 4 

My woeful self L C 143 

That the self was not the same P T 38 

Self-applied— if I had self-applied L C 76 

Self-doing — Yourself to pardon of 

self-doing crime Son 58 12 

Self-example — By .... mayst thou " 142 14 

Self-kill'd— ere it be self-kill'd "64 
Self-love — .... had never drown'd 

him RL 266 

Of his self-love, to stop Son 3 8 

Sin of self-love possesseth all " 62 1 

self-love quite contrary I read " 62 11 

Self-loving— and self-loving nuns VA 752 

Self so self-loving were iniquity Son 62 12 

Self-same — And in the .... seat R L 289 

Yet for the self-same purpose " 1047 

even by the self-same sky Son 15 6 

Self-slaughter'd— on her body R L 1733 

Self-substantial — with .... fuel Son 1 6 

Self-trust— if there be no self-trust R L 158 

Self-will— .... himself doth tire " 707 

Self-will'd- Be not self-will'd Son 6 13 

Sell— To sell myself VA 513 

Or sells eternity to get a toy R L 214 

Must sell her joy, her life " 385 

that purpose not to sell Son 21 14 

set thy person forth to sell P P 19 12 

Selling — in selling hours of dross Son 146 11 

Semblance- whose simple .... V A 795 

When with like semblance R L 1113 

the semblance of a devil " 1246 

no semblance did remain " 1453 

In thy sweet semblance " 1759 

And your sweet semblance Son 13 4 

Send — vapours doth he send V A 274 

I send this written ambassage Son 26 3 

I send them back again " 45 14 

Send'st — that thou send'st from thee " 61 5 

Sense— that the sense of feeling V A 489 

appals her senses " 882 

her senses all dismay'd " 896 

Urging the worser sense R L 249 

He in the worst sense " 324 

she in that sense forsook " 1538 

I bring in sense Son 35 9 

That my steel'd sense " 112 8 

that my adder's sense " 112 10 

My deepest sense, how hard "• 120 10 

nor my five senses can " 141 9 

'gainst rule, 'gainst sense L C 271 

doth ravish human sense P P 8 6 

Doth cite each moving sense " 15 3 

Senseless — cold and senseless stone VA - 211 

that senseless reputation R L 820 

She tears the senseless Sinon " 1504 

Senseless trees they cannot hear PP 21 21 

Sensible — that were but sensible VA 436 

My woe too sensible thy passion 

maketh R L 1678 

Sensual— For to thy sensual fault Son 35 9 



SENSUAL 



247 



SHAKE 



Sensual — To any sensual feast Son 141 8 

Sent — In rage sent out M L 1671 

what tributes ■wounded fancies sent i C 197 

was sent me from a nun " 232 

Sentence — Who fears a sentence R L 244 

And midst the sentence " 566 

Sentinel — himself aflfection's .... V A 650 

and sentinel the night R L 942 

Separable — in our lives a . . . . spite Son 36 6 
Separation — That by this separation " 39 7 
Sfepulchre — His snout digs sepul- 
chres VA 622 

The right of sepulchres Son 68 6 

find their sepulchres in mud L C 46 

Sepulchred — be in thy shade R L 805 

Sequent — In .... toil all forwards Son 60 4 

Serpent — where never serjjent hisses K^ 17 

Who sees the lurking serpent R L 362 

Servant — Why hath thy servant Oj)- 

portunity " 932 

servants to shallow fools " 1016 

bid your servant once adieu Son 57 8 

live thou upon thy servant's loss " 146 9 

Serve — Now serves the season R L 166 

leisure serve with dull debaters " 1019 

serve thou false Tarquin so " 1197 

To serve their eyes L 135 

Serve always with assured trust P P 19 31 
When time shall serve " 19 35 

Served — Hath served a dumb arrest R L 1780 

Service — Nor services to do Son 57 4 

thy service to despise " 149 10 

Servile— Yet was he servile VA 112 

Subject and servile " 1161 

heartens up his servile powers RL 295 

Servilely— Servilely master'd with V A 392 

Serving — Serving with looks Son 7 4 

one foolish heart from serving " 141 10 

Servitor — as servitors to the unjust R L 285 

Session — When to the sessions Son 30 1 

From this session interdict P T 9 

Set — And being set, I'll smother VA 18 

it will set the heart on fire " 388 

Set thy seal-manual " 516 

he hath a battle set " 619 

his breath and beauty set " 935 

set dissension 'twixt the son " 1160 

name of 'chaste' unhappily set R L 8, 

To set forth that which " 32 

sets every joint a-shaking " 452 

sets his foot upon the light " 673 

May set at noon " 784 

the sun being set " 1226 

set in her mistress' sky " 1230 

What wit sets down " 1299 

Once set on ringing " 1494 

So Lucrece, set a-work " 1496 

against my heart he set his sword " 1640 

With sad-set eyes and wretched 

arms " 1662 

set thy long-experienced wit " 1820 

Sets you most rich in youth Son 15 10 

in the long year set " 52 6 

On Helen's cheek all art of beauty 

set " 53 7 

the flourish set on youth " 60 9 

to your fair no painting set " 83 2 

disposed to set me light " 88 1 

I can set down a story • " 88 6 



Set — To set a form Son 89 6 

Sets down her babe " 143 3 
Upon whose weeping margent she 

was set i C 39 

in the imagination set " 136 

And set thy person forth P P 19 12 

Set'st— Thou set'st the wolf R L 878 

Settled— Ne'er settled equally VA 1139 

reasons find of settled gravity Son 49 8 

Several — each several limb V A 1067 

but with several graces R L 1410 

think that a several plot Son 137 9 

from juany a several fair L C 206 

each several stone " 216 

Severe— but is still severe VA 1000 

merciful and too severe " 1155 

Sex— Their gentle sex to weep R L 1237 

and sexes both enchanted L C 128 

Shade — smother'd up in shade V A 1035 

below with his wings' shade R L 507 

be sepulchred in thy shade " 805 

thou wander'st in his shade Son 18 11 

thy shade shines so " 43 8 

thy fair imperfect shade " 43 11 

every one, one shade " 53 3 

Under a myrtle shade PP 6 2 

gone to the hedge for shade " 11 2 

Sitting in a pleasant shade " 21 3 

Shaded — alack, too timely shaded " 10 3 

Shadow — died to kiss his shadow V A 162 

the shadow had forsook " 176 

I'll make a shadow " 191 

shadow to his melting buttock lent " 315 

Each shadow makes him stop " 706 

Then, gentle shadow " 1001 

When he beheld his shadow "' 1099 

in the heart that shadows dread- 

eth RL 270 

Such shadows are the weak " 460 

shadows his lewd eyes affright " 971 

At his own shadow " 997 

On this sad shadow " 1457 

Presents thy shadow Son 27 10 

Whilst that this shadow " 37 10 
whose shadow shadows doth make " 43 5 

How would thy shadow's form " 43 6 

strange shadows on you tend " 53 2 

can every shadow lend " 53 4 

shadow of your beauty show " 53 10 

While shadows like to thee " 61 4 

Eoses of shadow " 67 8 

As with your shadow " 98 14 

' Wander,' a word for shadows P P 14 11 

Shadoiv — clouds that shadow heav- 
en's light VA 533 

Shadow'd — His nose being .... R L 1416 

Shady — And in thy shady cell " S81 

dial's shady stealth mayst know Son 77 7 

Shag — fetlocks shag and long VA 295 

Shake — Sometimes she shakes her 

head " 223 

Shakes thee on my breast " 648 

make him shake and shudder " 880 

earth's foundation shakes " 1047 

my frail joints shake RL 227 

that his hand shakes withal " 467 

shakes aloft his Eoman blade " 505 

Rough winds do shake ' Son 18 3 

shake hands to torture me '• 28 6 



SHAKE 



248 



SHALL 



Shake — which shake against the 

cold Son 73 3 

Shaken — and is never shaken " 116 6 

by my unkindness shaken " 120 5 

Shaking — Shaking her wings VA 57 

Shaking their scratch'd ears " 924 

sets every joint a-shaking R L 452 

Shall— thy lips shall never open VA 48 

one sweet kiss shall pay " 84 

The kiss shall be thine " 117 

Shall the day seem night " ..... 122 

Shall cool the heat " 190 

No dog shall rouse thee " 240 

•which way shall she turn, what 

shall she say " 253 

I never shall regard " -... 377 

you shall have a kiss " 536 

shall we meet to-morrow " 585 

Say, shall we? shall we? wilt " 586 

and going I shall fall " ..... 719 

who shall cope him first " 888 

So shall I die " 1074 

hereafter shall attend " 1136 

It shall be waited on " 1137 

Shall not match his woe " 1140 

It shall be fickle " 1141 

shall the truest sight beguile " 1144 

shall make it most weak " 1145 

It shall be sparing " 1147 

shall it keep in quiet " 1149 

It shall be raging-mad " 1151 

It shall suspect " «... 1153 

It shall not fear " 1154. 

It shall be merciful " 1155 

Perverse it shall be " 1157 

It shall be cause of war " 1159 

their loves shall not enjoy " — 1164 

within her bosom it shall dwell " 1173 

My throbbing heart shall rock thee " 1186 

There shall not be one minute " 1187 

When shall be think B L 159 

Shall curse my bones " 209 

Shall by a painted cloth be kept " 245 

My heart shall never countermand " 276 

Shall plead for me " 480 

what sorrow I shall breed " 499 

husband shall remain " 519 

wliere Lust shall learn " 617 

wherein it shall discern " 619 

shall change thy good " 656 

' So shall these slaves be king " 659 

shall rudely tear thee " 669 

shall never come " 1062 

He shall not boast " 1063 

' Nor shall he smile " 1065 

My tongue shall utter all " 1076 

Shall gush pure streams " 1078 

shall thereon fall and die " 1139 

Shall tune our heart-strings " 1141 

shall for hiin be spent " 1182 

shall ray fame be bred " 1188 

What legacy shall I bequeath " 1192 

shall be thy boast " 1193 

My blood shall wash " 1207 

life's fair end shall free it " 1208 

my hand shall conquer thee " 1210 

both shall victors be " 1211 

shall be accounted evil " 1245 

which shall go before " 1302 



Shall—' shall fit the trespass best R L 1613 

Shall plight your honorable faiths " 1690 

By my excuse shall claim " 1715 

Where shall I live " 1754 

Shall rotten death make conquest " 1767 

winters shall besiege Son 2 1 

Shall sum. my count " 2 11 

Shall hate be fairer lodged " 10 10 

if it shall go well " 14 7 

shall together thrive " 14 11 

Shall I compare thee " 18 1 

summer shall not fade " 18 9 

Nor shall Death brag " 18 11 

love shall in my verse'ever live " 19 14 
my glass shall not persuade me " 22 1 
Death my bones with dust shall 

cover 
So shall those blots 
thine shall be the praise 
When shall I see 
Shall reasons find 
no motion shall I know 
Shall neigh, — no dull flesh 
shall excuse my jade 
When that shall vade 
shall outlive this powerful rhyme 
But you shall shine 
war shall statues overturn 
war's quick fire shall burn 
Shall you pace forth ; your praise 

shall still find room 
in hope my Verse shall stand 
Against my love shall be 
he shall never cut 
shall in these black lines be seen 
And they shall live 
shall beauty hold a plea 
0, how shall summer's honey 

breath hold out 
Shall Time's best jewel from Time's 

chest lie hid 
shall not be thy defect 
Than you shall hear 
Shall carry me away 
with thee shall stay 
Shall profit thee 
Or I shall live 
immortal life shall have 
in men's eyes shall lie 
shall be my gentle verse ' 

created shall o'er-read 
your being shall rehearse ' 

You still shall live ' 

Which shall be most my glory ' 

such a counterpart shall fame his 

wit ' 

no more shall dwell ' 

so shall I taste ' 

So shall I live ' 

what shall be thy amends ' 

what shall have no end ' 

Or whether shall I say ' ' 

Which shall above that idle rank 

remain ' 

this shall ever be ' 

Shall will in others seem ' 

this shall I ne'er know ' 

Shall worms, inheritors of this suc- 
cess " 146 



32 


2 


36 


3 


38 


14 


49 


2 


49 


8 


51 


8 


51 


11 


51 


12 


54 


14 


55 


2 


55 


3 


55 


5 


55 


7 


55 


10 


60 


13 


63 


1 


63 


11 


63 


13 


63 


14 


65 


3 



65 



65 


10 


70 


1 


71 


2 


74 


2 


74 


4 


77 


14 


81 


1 


81 


5 


81 


8 


81 


9 


81 


10 


81 


11 


81 


13 


83 


10 


84 


11 


89 


10 


90 


11 


93 


1 


101 


1 


110 


9 


114 


3 


122 


3 


123 


13 


135 


7 


144 


13 



SHALL 



249 



SHARP 



SIiiiU— That shall prefer L C 280 

The truth I shall not know P P 2 13 

how shall I swear to love "51 

to know thee shall suffice "57 

When time shall serve " 19 35 

the cock that treads them shall not 

know " 19 40 

with age shall them attaint " 19 46 

Shallow — her husband's .... tongue R L 78 

servants to shallow fools " 1016 

make lesser noise than shallow fords " 1329 

throws that shallow habit by " 1814 

By shallow rivers by whose falls P P 20 7 

Shallowest — Your shallowest help 

will hold me Son 80 9 

Shalt — secrets sbalt thou know V A 16 

thou unask'd shalt have " 102 

thou shalt be my deer " 231 

and thou shalt have it " 374 

Then shalt thou see " 703 

for thou shalt not rise " 710 

When thou shalt charge me R L 226 

Shalt have thy trespass cited up " 524 

That thou shalt see thy state " 644 

Collatine, thou shalt not know " 1058 

But thou shalt know thy interest " 1067 

Shalt oversee this will " 1205 

that thou shalt see it " 1206 

that thou shalt lend me " 1685 

windows of thine age shalt see Son 3 11 
issueless shalt hap to die "93 

As fast as thou shalt wane " 11 6 

And shalt by fortune once more 

re-survey " 32 3 
when thou shalt strangely pass " 49 5 
and thou shalt find " 77 10 
When thou shalt be disposed " 88 1 
shalt win much glory " 88 8 
in this shalt find thy monument " 107 13 
thou shalt not boast " 123 1 
thou shalt iind it merits not re- 
proving " 142 4 
So shalt thou feed on Death " 146 13 
'Mongst our mourners shalt thou 
go P T 20 

Shjinie — He red for shame V A 36 

He bxirns with bashful shame " 49 

Pure shame and awed resistance " 69 

'Twixt crimson shame " 76 

' For shame,' he cries " 379 

Forgetting shame's pure blush " 558 

Cj'nthia for shame obscures " 728 

My face is full of shame " 808 

beauty would blush for shame RL 54 

When shame assail'd " 63 

O, shame to knighthood " 197 

this surviving shame " 223 

The shame and fault finds no ex- 
cuse " 238 

Covers the shame that follows " 357 

or else some shame supposed " 377 

What wrong, what shame " 499 

The shame that from them " 535 

put on his shape to do him shame " 597 

shame be seeded in thine age " 603 

read lectures of such shame " 618 

dishonour, shame, misgoverning " 654 

Thou loathed in their shame " 662 

Shame folded up " 675 



Shame — what helpless shame I feel R L 756 

Dim register and notary of shame " ..... 765 

reproach to Tarquiu's shame " 816 

' O unseen shame ! invisible " 827 

pleasure turns to open shame " 890 

to rid me of this shame " 1031 

So of shame's ashes " 1188 

My shame so dead " 1190 

My shame be his " 1202 

live and think no shame of me " 1204 

women tenants to their shame " 1260 

and shame that might ensue " 1263 

he blush'd to see her shame " 1344 

else lasting shame " 1629 

my shame still rest upon record " 1643 

Till manly shame bids him " 1777 

Were an all-eating shame Son 2 8 

such murderous shame commits " 9 14 
For shame ! deny that thou " 10 1 

Nor can thy shame give physic " 34 9 
guilt should do thee shame " 36 10 

To find out shame " 61 7 

dost thou make the shame " 95 1 

One blushing shame " 99 9 

To know my shames " 112 6 

slander'd with a bastard shame " 127 4 
expense of spirit in a waste of shame " 129 1 
They sought their shame and so 

their shame did find L C 187 

And so much less of shame " 188 

'gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 'gainst 
shame " 271 

Shame — To shame the sun by day 

and her VA 732 

To shame his hope R L 1003 

Lucrece shames herself to see " 1084 

live no more to shame nor me nor 

you Son 72 12 

Shamed — shamed with the note R L 208 

When life is shamed " 1155 

For I am shamed by that Son 72 13 

Shameful— Shameful it is RL 239 

partner in this shameful doom " 672 

bear such shameful blows " 8.32 

I murder shameful scorn " 1189 

Shamefully— honour misplaced Son 66 5 

Shaming— As shaming any eye R L 1143 

Shape — In shape, in courage VA 294 

Hast thou put on his shape R L 597 

Shape every bush " 973 

And shapes her sorrow " 1458 

some shape in Sinon's was abused " 1529 

Tarquin's shape came in her mind " 1586 

her husband's shape in mind Son 9 8 

Mine eyes have drawn thy shape " 24 10 
in every blessed shape we know " 53 12 
No shape so true " 62 6 

Of bird, of flower, or shape " 113 6 

it shapes them to your feature " 113 12 

Shapeless — shapeless and unfinish'd F^ 415 

a hideous, shapeless devil R L 973 

Share — doth share a ijart Son 47 8 

Ah, neither be my share PP 14 1 

Sharing— Trojan mothers .... joy R L 1431 

Sharp— empty eagle, sharp by fast VA 55 

Under whose sharp fangs " 663 

sun and sharp air " 1085 

with his sharp spear " 1112 

Sharp hunger by the conquest R L .... 422 



SHARP 



250 



SHE 



Sharp— under the gripe's .... claws B L 543 

To keep thy sharp woes waking " 1136 

Will fix a sharp knife " 1138 

in sorrow's sharp sustaining " 1573 

More sharp to me Son 50 12 

by deatli's sharp sting P P 10 4 
Sharpeu'd — To-morrow sharpen'd in 

his former might Son 56 4 

Sharp'st — blunt the sharp'st intents " 115 7 

Sharply— sharply he did think VA 470 

She — thus she began " 7 

With this she seizeth " 25 

She red and hot " 35 

Nimbly she fastens " 38 

she begins to prove " 40 

Backward she push'd Mm, as she 

would be thrust ^ " 41 

So soon was she along " .... 43 

Now doth she stroke " 45 

soon she stops his lips " 46 

she with her tears " 49 

blow them dry again she seeks " 52 

He saith she is immodest " 53 

she murders with a kiss " 54 

Even so she kiss'd his brow " 59 

And where she ends she doth anew 

begin ■ " 60 

She feedeth on the steam " 63 

Still she entreats " 73 

she tunes her tale . " 74 

she loves him best " 77 

she cannot choose but love " 79 

immortal hand she swears " 80 

what she did crave " 88 

she for this good turn " 82 

Her help she sees, but help she 

cannot get " 93 

She bathes in water . " 94 

' 0, pity,' 'gan she cry " 95 

She had not brought forth " 204 

she cannot right her cause " 220 

And now she weeps, and now she 

fain would speak " 221 

she shakes her head " 223 

Now gazeth she on him " 224 

She would, he will not " 226 

She locks her lily fingers " 228 

' Fondling,' she saith " 229 

how doth she now " 249 

shall she turn ? what shall she say " 253 

' Pity,' she cries, 'some favour " 257 

And forth she rushes " 262 

She answers him, as if she knew 

his mind " 308 

She puts on outward strangeness " 310 

that she is so nigh " .341 

How she came stealing " 344 

Now was she just before him " 349 

down she kneels " 350 

she heaveth up his hat " 351 

she takes him by the hand " 361 

' Give me my heart,' saith she " 374 

Thus she replies " 385 

quoth she, ' hast thou a tongue " 427 

advisedly she raarketh " 457 

she flatly falleth down " 463 

believing she is dead " 467 

on the grass she lies as she were 

slain " 473 



She — and she by her good will V A 479 

faintly she upheaveth " 482 

' O, where am I ?' quoth she " 493 

' Good-night,' quoth she " 587 

she faint with dearth " 545 

glutton-like she feeds " 548 

she will draw his lips " 552 

she begins to forage " 554 

she takes all she can, not all she 

listeth " 564 

0, had she then gave over " 571 

she had not suck'd " 572 

she can no more detain him " 577 

She is resolved no longer " 579 

by Cupid's bow she doth protest " 581 

' Sweet boy,' she says " 583 

'The boar!' quoth she " 589 

she trembles at his tale " 591 

yoking arms she throws " 592 

She sinketh down " 593 

she on her back " 594 

Now is she in the very lists " 595 

imaginary she doth prove " 597 

so she languisheth " 603 

which she iu him finds missing " 605 

She seeks to kindle " 605 

She hath assay'd " 608 

She's Love, she loves, and yet she 

is not loved " 610 

hadst been gone,' quoth she " 613 

what of that?' quoth she " 717 

' In night,' quoth she " 720 

Lest she should steal " 726 

Wherein she framed thee " 731 

hath she bribed the Destinies " 733 

after him she darts " 817 

in the dark she lay " 827 

now she beats her heart " 829 

' Ay me !' she cries " 833 

She, marking them, begins " 835 

who hath she to spend " 847 

She says ' 'Tis so :' they answer " 851 

if she said ' No " 852 

This said, she hasteth " 865 

yet she hears no tidings " 867 

She hearkens for his hounds " 868 

Anon she hears them " 869 

she coasteth to the cry '' 870 

And as she runs " 871 

She wildly breaketh " 874 

she hoars the hounds " 877 

Whereat she starts " 878 

For now she knows " 883 

Thus stands she " 895 

She tells them 'tis " 897 

with that word she spied " 900 

she knows not whither " 904 

This way she runs, and now she 

will no further " 905 

She treads the path that she un- 

treads " 908 

She finds a hound " 913 

here she meets another " 917 

To whom she speaks " 918 

she at these sad signs draws up " 929 

thus chides she Death " 932 

She vail'd her eyelids " 956 

far oif she hears " 973 

imagination she did follow " 975 



SHE 



251 



SHE 



She — when she seemeth drown'd VA 984 

she uuweaves the web that she 

hath wrought " 991 

It was not she that call'd " 993 

Now she adds honours " 994 

She clepes hhn king " 995 

' No, no,' quoth she " 997 

she doth extenuate " 1010 

she humbly doth insinuate " 1012 

' O Jove,' quoth she " 1015 

she hears a merry horn " 1025 

Whereat she leaps " 1026 

to the lure, away she flies " 1027 

she treads on it so light " 1028 

doth she hang her head " 1058 

Dumbly she passions, franticly 

she doteth " 1059 

She thinks he could not " 1060 

she looks so steadfastly " 1063 

And then she reprehends " 1065 

'And yet,' quoth she " 1070 

With this, she falleth in the place 

she stood " 1121 

She looks upon his lips " 1123 

She takes him by the hand " 1124 

She whispers in his ears " 1125 

■woeful words she told " 1126 

She lifts the coffer-lids " 1127 

' Wonder of time,' quoth she " 1133 

She bows her head " 1171 

She crops the stalk " 1175 

which she compares to tears " 1176 

'Poor flower,' quoth she ' " 1177 

weary of the world, away she hies " 1189 

she securely gives S L 89 

But she that never coped " 99 

She touch'd no unknown baits " 103 

Nor could she moralize " 104 

she doth express " Ill 

but she is not her own " 241 

She took me kindly " 253 

her husband's welfare she did hear " 263 

Whereat she smiled " 264 

seen her as she stood " 265 

But she, sound sleeping " 363 

that she reflects so bright " 376 

a virtuous monument, she lies " 391 

she is dreadfully beset " 444 

She, much amazed, breaks ope " 446 

That thinks she hath beheld " 451 

but she, in worser taking " 453 

she trembling lies " 457 

She dares not look " 458 

But she with vehement prayers " 475 

While she, the picture " 542 

She puts the period " 565 

That thrice she doth begin ere 

once she speaks " 567 

She conjures him " 568 

Quoth she, 'Reward not hospitality " 575 

' Thou art,' quoth she " 652 

linen that she wears " 680 

But she hath lost " 687 

how she fares " 721 

She says, her subjects " 722 

she controlled still " 727 

She bears the load " 734 

She like a wearied lamb " 737 

She, desperate, with her nails " 739 



She — She stays, exclaiming B. L 741 

She there remains " 744 

She prays she never may behold " 746 

' For day,' quoth she '• 747 

Here she exclaims " 757 

She wakes her heart " 759 

thus breathes she forth " 762 

from her be-tumbled couch she 

starteth " 1037 

' In vain,' quoth she " 1044 

where she sits weeping " 1087 

To whom she sobbing speaks " 1088 

Thus cavils she with every thing 

she sees " 1093 

So she, deep-drenched " lioo 

each thing she views " 1101 

' You mocking birds,' quoth she " 1121 

is she in mutiny " 1153 

' To kill myself,' quoth she " 1156 

when sadly she had laid " 1212 

she hoarsely calls her maid " 1214 

Her mistress she doth give " 1219 

' My girl,' quoth she " 1270 

and there she stay'd " 1275 

She would request " 1283 

she prepares to write " 1296 

At last she thus begins " 1303 

Here folds she up " 1310 

She dares not thereof make dis- 
covery " 1314 

Ere she with blood had stain'd " 1316 

She hoards, to spend " 1318 

she would not blot the letter " 1322 

she delivers it " 1333 

dull and slow she deems " 1336 

She thought he blush'd " 1354 

The more she saw " 1357 

The more she thought " 1358 

But long she thinks " 1359 

she cannot entertain " 1361 

That she her plaints a little while " 1364 

she calls to mind " 1366 

Many she sees " 1445 

Till she despairing Hecuba beheld " 1447 

Of what she was " 1453 

' Poor instrument,' quoth she " 1464 

Here feelingly she weeps " 1492 

She lends them words, and she 

their looks doth borrow " 1498 

She throws her eyes about " 1499 

And who she finds forlorn she 

doth lament " 1500 

At last the sees " 1501 

she advisedly perused " 1527 

on him she gazed " 1531 

in his plain face she spied " 1532 

That she concludes " 1533 

' It cannot be,' quoth she " 1534 

She would have said " 1535 

she in that sense forsook " 1538 

She tears the senseless Sinon " 1564 

At last she smilingly " 1567 

' Fool, fool !' quoth she " 1568 

She looks for night, and then she 

longs for morrow " 1571 

And both she thinks too long " 1572 

That she with painted images " 1577 

how she fares " 1594 

she gives her sorrow fire " 1604 



SHE 



252 



SHELVE 



She— she can discharge R L 1605 

She modestly prepares " 1607 

' Few words,' quoth she " 1613 

Which speechless woe of his poor 

she attendeth " 1674 

For she that was " 1682 

you fair lords,' quoth she " 1688 

But she that yet " 1699 

' 0, speak,' quoth she " 1700 

with a joyless smile she turns away " 1711 

' No, no,' quoth she " 1714 

She throws forth Tarquin's name ; 

' He, he,' she says " 1717 

She utters this " 1721 

Even here she sheathed " 1723 

The father says 'She's mine.' 'O, 

mine she is " 1795 

for she was only mine " 1798 

Which she too early ■ " 1801 

' she was my wife " 1802 

that she hath kill'd " 1803 

where is she so fair Son 3 5 

and she in thee "39 

she lends to those "44 
whom she best endow'd she gave 

the more " 11 11 

She carved thee for her seal " 11 13 

as she wrought thee " 20 10 

But since she prick'd thee out " 20 13 

till she have prevailed " 41 8 

That she hath thee " 42 3 

so doth she abuse me " 42 7 

she loves but me alone " 42 14 

she hath no exchequer " 67 11 
O, him she stores, to show what 

wealth she had " 67 13 

She keeps thee " 126 7 

She may detain " 126 10 

when she walks ' " 130 12 

As any she belied with false " 130 14 

she is made of truth " 138 1 

though I know she lies " 138 2 

That she might think " 138 3 

she thinks me young " 138 5 

Although she knows " 138 6 

wherefore says she not she is unjust " 138 9 

and she with me " 138 13 

she turns my foes " 139 11 

That she that makes me sin " 141 14 

the thing she would have stay " 143 4 

she saw my woeful state " 145 4 

' I hate ' she alter'd " 145 9 

hate away she threw " 145 13 

brand she quenched " 154 9 

Oft did she heave her napkin L C 15 

from a maund she drew " 36 

one b}' one she in a river threw " 38 

Upon whose weeping margent she 

was set " 39 

schedules had she many a one " 43 

Which she perused, sigh'd " 44 

bathed she in her fluxive eye " 50 

in top of rage the lines she rents " 55 

' Father,' she says, ' though in me " 71 

In his fair parts she did abide " 83 

She was new lodged " 84 

she must herself away " 156 

For she was sought " 236 

She that her fame " 243 



She — she would the caged cloister fly i C 249 

would she be immured " 251 

swears that she is made of truth P P 1 1 
though I know she lies "12 

That she might think me "13 

that she thinks me young "15 

says my love that she is young "19 

She told him stories "45 

She show'd him favour " 4 R 

she touch'd him here and there "47 
Then fell she on her back " 4 13 

she hotter that did look "67 

' O Jove,' quoth she " 6 14 

how often hath she joined "77 

to please me hath she coined "79 

She burn'd with love " 7 13 

She burn'd out love " 7 14 

She framed the love, and yet she 

foil'd the framing " 7 15 

She bade love last, and yet she fell 

a-turning " 7 16 
Her stand she takes "95 
She, silly queen "97 
' Once,' quoth she, ' did I see "99 
' See, in my thigh,' quoth she " 9 12 
She showed hers " 9 13 
She told the youngling " 11 3 
so fell she to him " 11 4 
' Even thus,' quoth she " 11 5 
And then she clipp'd Adonis " 11 6 
'Even thus,' quoth she " 11 7 
' Even thus,' quoth she " 11 9 
And as she fetched breath " 11 11 
She bade good-night " 14 2 
'Farewell,' quoth she " 14 5 
sweetly did she smile " 14 7 
she joy'd to jest at my exile " 14 9 
For she doth welcome " 15 7 
For why, she sigh'd " 15 12 
Alas, she could not lielp it " 16 12 
Lest she some subtle practice smell " 19 9 
too late she will repent " 19 15 
with scorn she put away " 19 18 
though she strive to try herstrength " 19 19 
though she put thee back " 19 36 
She will not stick to round me " 19 51 
Yet will she blush " 19 53 
She, poor bird, as all forlorn " 21 9 
now would she cry " 21 13 
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she P T 63 

Sheatheil — tushes never sheathed V A 617 

Sheathed unaware the tusk " 1116 

had sheathed their light RL 397 

she sheathed in her harmless breast " 1723 

Sheave — all girded up in sheaves Son 12 7 

Slieaved— descended her .... hat L C 31 

Shed — fresh flowers being shed V A 665 

ever modest eyes with sorrow shed R L 683 

Shed for the slaughter'd husband " 1376 

borrow'd tears that Sinon sheds " 1549 

which thy love sheds Son 34 13 

Sheep — sheep are gone to fold V A 532 

among a flock of sheep " 685 

Sheet^Teaching the sheets " 398 

Who o'er the white sheet peers R L 472 

Shelly — backward in his shelly cave VA 1034 

Shelter — To .... thee from tempest " 238 

Shelve— strong pirates, shelves, and 

sands R L 335 



SHEPHERD 



253 



SHOULD 



Slieplicrd — Sorrow to shepherds VA 455 

to Phrygian shepherds lent It L 1502 

O sweet shepherd, hie thee PP 12 11 

My shepherd's pipe can sound " 18 27 
see the sheplierds feed their flocks " 20 6 
truth in every shepherd's tongue " 20 18 

Shield— His batter'd shield VA 104 

and call'd it then their shield JR L Gl 

Shielded — I mine honour shielded L C 151 

Shift— Danger deviseth shifts VA 690 

And as one shifts P L 1104 

treason, forgery, and shift " 920 

Shifts but his place Son 9 10 

Sliiftinff— With shifting change " 20 4 

Quick-shifting antics, ugly P L 459 

injurious, shifting Time " 930 

Sliiiie — The sun that shines from 

heaven shines but warm VA 193 

shine when he doth fret " 621 

too hot the eye of heaven shines Son 18 5 

one early morn did shine " 33 9 

thy shade shines so " 43 8 

But you shall shine " 55 3 

my love may still shine bright " 65 14 

no fair acceptance shine " 135 8 

that on this earth doth shine P P 3 10 

shine, sun, to succour flowers " 15 16 

So between them love did shine P T 33 

Shine — borrow'd all their shine VA 488 

obscures her silver shine " 728 

Shilling — shining star doth borrow " 861 

read the subtle-shining secrecies P L 101 

and to shining arms " 197 

The silver-shining queen " 786 

burnt the shining glory " 1523 

With shining falchion " 1626 

A shining gloss that vadeth PP 13 2 

Shiver'd— And all the beauty P L 1763 

Shock— forces, shocks, and fears L C 273 

Slione — Shone like the moon T'^4 492 

Shook — shook three summers' pride Son 104 4 

Shook otf my sober guards L C 298 

Shoot— to over-shoot his troubles VA 680 

before thy shoot be ended P L 579 

join and shoot their foam " 1442 

But shoot not at me Son I'il 12 

Shooteth— Shooteth from the sky VA 815 

SliO)) — Which in my bosom's shop Son 24 7 

Shore — as one on shore T^^4 817 

to drown in ken of shore P L 1114 

To break upon the galled shore " 1440 

Which parts the shore So7i 56 10 

make towards the pebbled shore "60 1 

on the kingdom of the shore " 64 6 
Shorn — right of sepulchres were 

shorn away " 68 6 

Short — Ten kisses short as one VA 22 

an hour but short " 33 

High crest, short ears " 297 

His short thick neck " 627 

though seeming short " 842 

makes short their pilgrimage PP..... 791 

and how swift and short " 991 

By this short schedule " 1312 

Short time seems long " 1573 

sick and short assays " 1720 

hath all too short a date Son 18 4 

quill doth come too short " 83 7 
more short than waste or ruining " 125 4 



Short — having so short a lease Son 146 5 

age's breath is short P P 12 5 

Short — Short, night, to-night, and 

length thyself to-morrow " 15 IS 

Short-jointed— Round-hoof 'd, VA 295 

Short-number'd- leases of short- 

number'd hours Sn7i 124 10 

Shot — And little stars shot P L 1525 

Should— should not be wasted VA 130 

As who should say " 280 

the living should exceed " 292 

what a horse should have " 299 

Thy palfrey, as he should " 385 

Yet should I be in love " 438 

Should by his stealing in disturb " 450 

that the debt should double " 521 

I thy death should fear " 660 

What should I do " 667 

Lest she should steal " 726 

harmony should run "■ 781 

at him should have fled " 947 

who should best become " 968 

as scorning it should pass " 982 

where no breach should be " 1066 

should dry his tears " 1092 

the day should yet be light " 1134 

should most mistrust " 1154 

he should keep unknown P L 34 

meaner men should vaunt " 41 

should underprop her fame " 53 

the red should fence the white " 63 

it should be kill'd " 74 

respect should have " 201 

As who should say " 320 

should countenance his sin " 343 

should govern every thing " 602 

The lesser thing should not " 663 

should stain so pure a bed " 684 

Her tears should drop " 686 

should not peep again " 788 

So should I have " 789 

'Why should the worm intrude " 848 

wretched blood should spill " 999 

should thee behold " 1143 

' if it should be told " 1284 

What should I say " 1291 

Lest he should hold " 1315 

'Why should the private pleasure " 1478 

why should so many fall " 1483 

perjury should thrust " 1517 

should bear a wicked mind " 1540 

I should not live " 1642 

So should my shame " 1643 

should right poor ladies' harms " 1694 

that should survive " 1766 

should his use control " 1781 

Who should weep most " 1792 

that should have slain her foe " 1827 

should by time decease Son 1 3 

that face should form another "32 

to repair should be thy chief desire " 10 8 

the times should cease " 11 7 

you should prepare " 13 3 

So should that beauty " 13 5 

your sweet form should bear " 13 8 

So should the lines of life " 16 9 

So should my papers " 17 9 

You should live twice " 17 14 

death my days should expiate " 22 4 



SHOULD 



254 



SHUN 



Sliould — guilt should do thee shame So7i 36 10 
distance should not stop my way " 44 2 

why should I haste me " 51 3 

Then should I spur " 51 7 

Thy edge should blunter be " 56 2 

what should I do but tend " 57 1 

I should in thought control " 58 2 

image should keep open " 61 1 

slumbers should be broken " 61 3 

with infection should he live " 67 1 

advantage should achieve " 67 3 

Why should false painting " 67 5 

Why should poor beauty " 67 7 

Why should he live " 67 9 

then should make you woe " 71 8 
world should look into your moan " 71 13 

the world should task you " 72 1 

that you should love " 72 2 

And so should you " 72 14 

Which should example " 84 4 

should do it wrong " 89 11 

love should ever dwell " 93 10 

Thy looks should nothing " 93 12 

should afterwards burn clear " 115 4 
I should your great deserts repay " 117 2 

Which should transport " 117 8 

For why should others' false " 121 5 

beauty should look so " 127 14 

should that harvest reap " 128 7 

Why should my heart " 137 9 
For, if I should despair, I should 

grow mad " 140 9 

foul faults should find " 148 14 

What I should do again L C 322 

he should not pass those grounds P P % 8 

before the fall should be " 10 6 

should use like loving charms " 11 8 

Shoulder— Over one shoulder VA 1058 

Shouldst— thou shouldst think it " 156 

why shouldst thou feed " 169 

shouldst contemn me " 205 

thou shouldst strike at it " 938 

if thou shouldst depart Son 6 11 

the parts that thou shouldst bear "88 

thou shouldst in bounty cherish " 11 12 

Thou shouldst print more " 11 14 

kingdoms of hearts shouldst owe " 70 14 

shouldst not abhor my state " 150 12 
the deer that thou shouldst strike P P 19 2 

Show — Shows thee unripe VA 128 

Shows his hot courage " 276 

it shows most toward " 1157 

his barren skill to show R L 81 

shows like a virtuous deed " 252 

demeanour seeks to show " 474 

The light will show " 807 

To show the beldam daughters " 953 

to show the painter's strife " 1377 

Show me the strumpet " 1471 

some watery token shows " 1748 

Shows me a bare-boned death " 1761 

To show her bleeding body " 1851 

shows not half your parts Son 17 4 

not to show my wit " 26 4 

in wanting words to show it " 26 6 

To show me worthy " 26 12 

Till then not show my iead " 26 14 

in whom all ill well shows " 40 13 

when dreams do show thee me " 43 14 



Show — shadow of your beauty show Son 53 10 
Show me your image " 59 7 

shows me myself indeed " 62 9 

to show what wealth she had " 67 13 

To show false Art " 68 14 

Thy glass will show thee " 77 1 

thy glass will truly show " 77 5 

being extant well might show " 83 6 

the thing they most do show " 94 2 

long hence as he shows now " 101 14 

such a scope to show her pride " 103 2 
Your own glass shows you " 103 14 

Nor my beloved as an idol show " 105 2 
outward form would show it dead " 108 14 

Show — No cloudy show R L 115 

their leader's jocund show " 296 

and give the harmless show " 1507 

He entertain'd a show " 1514 

in shows of discontent " 1580 

wound his folly's show " 1810 

Leese but their show Son 5 14 

presenteth nought but shows " 15 3 

shadow's form form happy show " 43 6 
their virtue only is their show " 54 9 

thy odour matcheth not thy show " 69 13 
suspect of ill mask'd not thy show " 70 13 
virtue answer not thy show " 93 14 

less the show appear " 102 2 

Small show of man L C 92 

swouud at tragic shows " 308 

Dissembled with an outward show PP 19 38 
Showed — Show'd like two silver 

doves VA 360 

Show'd like an April daisy R L 395 

Show'd deep regard ■ " 1400 

Show'd life imprison'd " 1456 

full of cares, yet show'd content " 1503 

Yet show'd his visage L C 96 

She show'd him favours P P 4 6 

She showed hers " 9 13 

Shower — With such distilling 

showers VA 66 

with showers of silver brine R L 796 

Or as sweet-season'd showers Son 75 2 

nor drowns with showers " 124 12 

Show'st — grown, and therein show'st " 126 3 

Showing— Showing their birth " 76 8 

Showing life's triumph R L 402 

Showing fair nature L C 311 

Shown — farther than the eye hath 
- shown Son 69 8 

my deeds must not be shown " 121 12 

For her griefs so lively shown P P 21 17 

Shrewd — Thy eyes' shrewd tutor V A 500 

Shriek— night's herald, shrieks " 531 

shriek to see him there R L 307 

Shrieking — As often shrieking L C 20 

But thou shrieking harbinger P T 5 

Sh rill- tongued— Like .... tapsters VA 849 

Shrine — incense to so pureashrine R L 194 

Shrink— Shrinks backward in his 

shelly cave V A 1034 

Shruh— stoops not to the base 

shrub's foot R L 664 

But low shrubs wither " 665 

Shrunk — those shrunk pipes had fed " 1455 

Shudder — make him shake and .. .. VA ..... 880 

S)iun — prevent this storm and shun 

thy wrack R L 966 



SHUN 



255 



SIGN 



Shun— To shun this blot R L 1322 

We sicken to slaim sickness Son 118 4 
To shun the heaven " 129 14 
her noble suit in court did shun L C 234 

Slinnn'd — who ever shunn'd by 

precedent " 155 

Shut— That shuts him from the 

heaven iZ L .«.. 338 

Sick— By this, the love-sick queen 

began VA 175 

That love-sick Love by pleading " 328 

For my sick heart " 584 

by brain-sick rude desire Ji L 175 

To one sore sick " 702 

unwholesome breaths make sick " 779 

Give physic to the sick " 901 

sick and short assays " 1720 

And my sick Muse Son 79 4 

I was not sick of any fear " 86 12 

And sick of welfare " 118 7 

him that so fell sick of you " 118 14 

As testy sick men " 140 7 

I, sick withal, the help of bath 

desired " 153 11 

That the lover, sick to death PP 17 7 

Sicken — We sicken to shun sickness ^Soji 118 4 

Sickle — Within his bending sickle's 

compass come " 116 10 

Time's fickle glass, his sickle, hour " 126 2 

Sickly — The uncertain sickly appe- 
tite "147 4 
their sickly radiance do amend L C 214 

Sickness — marrow-eating sickness VA 741 

We sicken to shun sickness Son 118 4 

Sick-tlioughted — Venus VA 5 

Side — and by Venus' side " 180 

His brawny sides " 625 

by her side lay kill'd " 1165 

Collatine again by Lucrece' side £ L 381 

Swelling on either side " 389 

for standing by her side " 425 

her body in on every side " 1739 

pluck'd the knife from Lucrece' 

side " 1807 

than spurring to his side Son 50 12 

Upon thy side against myself " 88 3 

On both sides thus " 138 8 

my better angel from my side " 144 6 

fall by thy side " 151 12 

Laid by his side " 154 2 

sits he by her side L C 65 

on this side the verdict went " 113 

my better angel from my side P P 2 6 

Siege — Remove your siege V A 423 

This siege that hath engirt R L 221 

Against the wreckful siege Son 65 6 

Sigh — Then with her windy sighs VA 51 

sighs can never grave it " 376 

Sorrow that friendly sighs sought " 964 

Sighs dry her cheeks " 966 

My sighs are blown away " 1071 

eloquence with sighs is mixed R L 563 

My sighs, like whirlwinds " 586 

my tears, my sighs, my groans " 588 

When sighs and groans and tears " 1319 

Three times with sighs " 1604 

Even so his sighs " 1672 

Here with a sigh " 1716 

Her contrite sighs " 1727 



Sigli — with sighs himself doth 

smother Son 47 4 

Hallow'd with sighs L C 228 

their sighs to you extend " 276 

My sighs so deep P P 18 31 

How sighs resound " 18 34 

Sigh — I'll sigh celestial breath VA 189 

For now 'tis stale to sigh R L 1862 

I sigh the lack of many a thing Son 30 3 

For these dead birds sigh a prayer P T 67 

Sigh'd — sigh'd, tore, and gave the 

flood L C 44 

For why she sigh'd P P 15 12 

Sighing — And sighing it again VA 930 

Sight— 'bur sport is not in sight " 124 

o'erwhelming his fair sight " 183 

with his proud sight agrees " 288 

O, what a sight it was " 343 

that did feed her sight " 822 

That her sight dazzling " 1064 

He fed them with his sight " 1104 

the truest sight beguile " 1144 

like a vapour from her sight " 1166 

moralize his wanton sight R L 104 

a cloud, bereaves our sight " 373 

Lucrece to their sight " 384 

The sight which makes supposed 

terror " 455 

daunts them with more dreadful 

sights " 462 

To see sad sights moves more " 1324 

beguiled attention, charm'd the 

sight " 1404 

to his new-appearing sight Son 7 3 

rich in youth before my sight " 15 10 

my soul's imaginary sight " 27 9 

expense of many a vanish'd sight " 30 8 

stand against thy sight " 38 6 

the conquest of thy sight " 46 2 

thy picture's sight would bar " 46 3 

thy picture in my sight " 47 13 

like to thee do mock my sight " 61 4 

or vanish'd out of sight " 63 7 

all full with feasting on your sight " 75 9 

the rudest or gentlest sight " 113 9 
transport me farthest from your 

sight " 117 8 

dressings of a former sight " 123 4 

but in my sight "139 5 

no correspondence with true sight " 148 2 

give the lie to my true sight " 150 3 

The mind and sight distractedly L C 28 

Weak sights their sickly radiance " 214 

Whose sights till then " 282 

eyes their wished sight P P 15 10 

Flaming in the phoenix' sight P T 35 

Siglited — Thick - sighted, barren, 

lean VA 136 

Sightless — Poor grooms are sight- 
less night R L 1013 

thy shadow to my sightless view Son 27 10 

on siglitless eyes doth stay " 43 12 

Sign— Saw'st thou not signs VA 644 

signs and prodigies " 926 

at these sad signs " 929 

such signs of rage they bear R L 1419 

Such signs of truth " 1532 

Before these bastard signs Son 68 3 

These are certain signs to know P P 21 57 



SILENCE 



256 



SING 



VA 



BL 



PP 



BL 

VA 



BL 



Silence— This silence for my sin Son 83 

of my silence cannot boast " 86 

Excuse not silence so " 101 
Silent— This silent war of lilies B L 

In silent wonder " 

what silent love hath writ Son 23 

the sessions of sweet silent thought " 30 

Silk— With sleided silk L C 

Silken— Laundering the .... figures " 

their silken parcels hurls 
Silly— The silly boy, believing 

a weak and silly mind 

fright the silly lamb 

The silly lambs 

When, silly groom ! God wot 

She, silly queen, with more 

Unto the silly damsel 

One silly cross 

Silly-jeering— As idiots 

Silly-mild — raging-mad and . . 
Silver — like two silver doves 

obscure her silver shine 

from whose silver breast 

breaks the silver rain 

yokes the silver doves 

Their silver cheeks 

that hides the silver moon " 

with showers of silver brine " 

The stain upon his silver down " 

his beard all silver-white " 

and silver fountains mud Son 35 

Silver'd — all silver'd o'er with white " 12 

SilTcr-melting — morning's. ...dewJSi 

Silver-shining — The .... queen " 

Silver-white — stain that o'er with 

silver-white " 

Simile — Take all these similes L C 

Siniois — To .Simois' reedy banks B L 

shoot their foam at Simois' banks " 

Simple — in a tomb so simple VA 

Under whose simple semblance " 

simple truth miscall'd simplicity Son 66 

foregoing simple savour " 125 

thus is simple truth supprest " 138 

Who, young and simple L C 

And was my own fee-simple " 

Simple were so well compounded P T 

Simple — The poisonous simple some- 
time is compacted B L 

Simplicity — simple truth miscall'd 

simplicity Son 66 

Grace in all simijlicity P T 

Simply — Simply I credit §on 138 
Sin — Hiding base sin B L 

and hold it for no sin 

should countenance his sin 

The blackest sin is clear'd 

Authority for sin 

by thy favilt foul sin may say 

deeper sin than bottomless conceit 

To have their unseen sin 

AVhoever plots the sin 

Sits Sin to seize the souls 

but Sin ne'er gives a fee 

To all sins past 

sin's pack-horse, virtue's snare 

My sable ground of sin 

Let sin, alone committed 

To plague a private sin 



11 

10 

71 

84 

13 

1 

48 

17 

87 

467 

1016 

1098 

167 

1345 

7 

8 

13 

1812 

1151 

366 

728 

855 

959 

1190 

61 

371 

796 

1012 

1405 

2 

4 

24 

786 

56 

227 

1437 

1442 

244 

795 

11 

7 

8 

320 

144 

44 



11 

54 

7 

93 

209 

343 

354 

620 

629 

701 

753 

879 

882 

913 

923 

928 

1074 

1480 

1484 



Sin— Or blot with hell-born sin B L 1519 

Excusing thy sins more than thy 

sins are Son 35 8 
Sin of self-love possesseth all mine 

eye " 62 1 

for this sin there is no remedy " 62 3 

That sin by him advantage should " 67 8 

This silence for my sin " 83 9 

dost thou thy sins inclose "95 4 

'tis the lesser sin " 114 13 

Love is my sin " 142 1 

Hate of my sin " 142 2 

Sin — He learn'd to sin B L 630 

she that makes me sin Son 141 14 

To sin and never for to saint P J* 19 44 

Since — since eyes in eyes VA 120 

since I have hemm'd thee here " 229 

since I am such a park " 239 

Since sweating Lust on earth 

usurp'd " 794 

Since her best work is ruin'd " 954 

Since thou art dead " 1135 

Since he himself is reft " 1174 

Since thou art guilty BL 772 

guilty of my death since of my 

crime " 931 

Since that my case is past " 1022 

Since thou couldst not defend " 1034 

Since men prove beasts " 1148 

And ever since, as pitying " 1747 

Since Rome herself in them " 1833 

Since sweets and beauties do them- 
selves forsake Son 12 11 
But since she prick'd thee out " 20 13 
But since he died " 32 13 
Since why to love I can allege '' 49 14 
Since from thee going " 51 13 
Since, seldom coming " 52 6 
Since every one hath " 53 3 
Since mind at first " 59 8 
Since brass, nor stone, nor earth " 65 1 
since his rose is true " 67 8 
Since what he owes thee " 79 14 
But since your worth " 80 5 
Since that my life " 92 10 
Since first I saw you fresh " 104 8 
Since all alike ray songs " 105 3 
Since, spite of him, I'll live " 107 11 
Since I left you ' " 113 1 
Since my appeal says " 117 13 
For since each hand " 127 5 
Since saucy jacks so happy are " 128 13 
since mourning doth thee grace " 132 11 
but since I am near slain " 139 13 

Since I their altar L C 224 

Since that our faults in love P P 1 14 

Since — Of things long since, or V A 1078 

love's long-since-cancell'd woe Son 30 7 

In days long since " 67 14 

Sin-concealing — Vast chaos BL 767 

Sinew — all her sinews spread VA 903 

Sinewy — Whose sinewj' neck " 99 

Sinful — Were it not sinful then Son 103 9 

grounded on sinful loving " 142 2 

the centre of my sinful earth " 146 1 

Sing — the high wind sings V A 305 

and sings extemporally " 836 

That some would sing " 1102 

birds more cause to sing B L 333 



SING 



257 



SLANDERER 



RL 


871 


Son 8 


12 


8 


14 


" 29 


12 


" 39 


1 


" 78 


5 


" 97 


13 


" 100 


7 


" 102 


7 


" 106 


12 


PP 5 


14 


" 15 


5 


» 18 


38 


" 20 


8 


" 21 


5 


" 21 


25 



1128 

1142 

12 



Sing — where the sweet birds sing 
one pleasing note do sing 
Sings this to tliee 
sings hymns at heaven's gate 
with manners may I sing 
taught tlie dumb on liigh to sing 
Or, if tliey sing 
Sing to the ear 
in summer's front doth sing 
skill enough your worth to sing 
To sing heaven's praise 
While Philomela sits and sings 
Sweet birds sing not 
Melodious birds sing madrigals 
Beasts did leap and birds did sing 
All thy fellow birds do sing 

Slns'st — Philomel that sing'st of 
ravishment . R L 

thou sing'st not in the night " 

Sinsring— to singing he betakes P P 

Slnsrle — Die single, and thine image 

dies with thee Son 3 14 
'Thou single wilt prove none " 8 14 
consumest thyself in single life "92 
lose name of single one " 39 6 
Single nature's double name P T 39 

Singled— till they have singled VA 693 

Sinsleness — In singleness the parts Son 8 8 

Singular— that which is so singular iJ i 32 

Sink — Not gross to sink VA 150 

Sinks down to death Son 45 8 

Sinketli— She sinketh down VA 593 

Sinking — Then who- fears sinking 

where such treasure lies R L 280 

Sinon — perjured Sinon, whose en- 
chanting story " 1521 

some shape in Sinon's was abused " 1529 

subtle Sinon here is painted " 1541 

borrow'd tears that Sinon sheds " 1549 

For Sinon in his fire " 1556 

false Sinon's tears doth flatter " 1560 

She tears the senseless Sinon " 1564 

Sire — Or butcher-sire that reaves VA 766 

dissension 'twixt the son and sire " 1160 

a more sweet-smelling sire " 1178 

kill'd my son or sire R L 232 

The sire, the son, the dame " 1477 

Eesembling sire and child Son 8 11 

Siren — have I drunk of Siren tears "119 1 

Sister — Or sister sanctified L C 233 

the sister and the brother ' P P 8 2 

Sistering — from a sistering vale L C 2 

Sit — Here come and sit V A 17 

chafing, down Adonis sits " 325 

doves that sit a-billiug " ..... 366 

up in shade doth sit " 1035 

her heavenly image sits R L 288 

in the self-same seat sits Collatine " 289 

alone must sit and pine " 795 

like still-pining Tantalus he sits " 858 

Sits Sin to seize the souls " 882 

where she sits weeping " 1087 

in that bosom sits Son 9 13 

in thy parts do crowned sit " 37 7 

than in my verse can sit " 103 13 

sits he by her side L C 65 

Philomela sits and sings, I sit and 

mark PP 15 5 

There will we sit " 20 5 

17 



Sith — Sith in thy pride so fair a hope K^ 762 

Sith in his prime death doth " 1163 

Sitting — Sweet Cytherea, sitting by 

a brook P P 4 1 
with young Adonis sitting by her " 11 1 

Sitting in a pleasant shade " 21 3 
Situation — And situation with those 

dancing chips Son 128 10 

Size — In clamours of all size L C 21 

Skilful— Of skilful painting R L 1367 

Skill — far exceeds his barren skill " 81 

drowns for want of skill " 1099 

on Tereus descant'st better skill " 1134 

by force, by fraud, or skill " 1243 

labour'd with his skill " 1506 

for his wondrous skill " 1528 

drawn by your own sweet skill Son 16 14 

must you see his skill " 24 5 

folly doctor-like controlling skill " 66 10 

some in their skill " 91 1 

both skill and argument " 100 8 

They had not skill enough " 106 12 

to this purpose, that her skill " 126 7 

strength and warrantise of skill " 150 7 

the dialect and different skill L C 125 

Skill -contending — in .... schools R L 1018 

Skill'd— well-skill'd workman " 1520 

Skin — her alabaster skin " 419 

on that termless skin L C 94 

Skip— away he skips P P 11 11 

Sky — draw me through the sky V A 1.53 

when they blot the sky " 184 

as lightning from the sky " 348 

sun glorifies the sky " 485 

chase were in the skies " 695 

shooteth from the sky " 815 

through the empty skies " 1191 

in that sky of his delight R L 11 

a falcon towering in the skies " 505 

to the skies and ground " 1199 

suns set in her mistress' sky " 1230 

which purl'd up to the sky " 1407 

that the skies were sorry " 1524 

like rainbows in the sky " 1587 

even by the self-same sky Son 15 6 

Slack— be thou not slack P P 19 35 

Slack'd— Slack'd, not suppress'd R L 425 

Slack ly— Though slackly braided L O 35 

Slain — if himself were slain V A 243 

she lies as she were slain " 473 

so fair a hope is slain " 762 

with him is beauty slain " 1019 

thus was Adonis slain " 1111 

by Tarquin's falchion to be slain R L 1046 

slain in merry company " 1110 

that should have slain her foe " 1827 

when mine is slain Son 22 13 

but since I am near slain " 139 13 

Number there in love was slain P T 28 

Slaketh — no flood by raining .... R L 1677 

Slander— author of thy slander VA 1005. 

abadgeof fame to slander's livery P i 1054 

wash the slander of mine ill " 1207 

For slander's mark was ever yet Son 70 2 

slander doth but approve " 70 5 

And thence this slander " 131 14 

Slander'd — And beauty slander'd " 127 4 

Slanderer — Mad slanderers by mad 

ears believed be " 140 12 



SLANDERING 



258 



SMOKE 



Slandering — Slandering creation 

with a false esteem Son 127 12 

Slanderous— To slanderous tongues iJi^ 161 

As slanderous deathsman " ..... 1001 

Slaughter — that doth live by . . , . " 955 

and then I'll slaughter thee " 1634 

Slaughter' d — armour of still-slaugh- 

ter'dlust " 188 

shed for the slaughter'd husband " 1376 

on her self-slaughter'd body threw " 1733 

Slaughterhouse — But this no ... . " 1039 

Slave — my captive and my slave V A 101 

to be soft fancy's slave R L 200 

And they, like straggling slaves " 428 

some worthless slave of thine " 515 

these slaves be king and thou their 

slave " 659 

false slave to false delight " 927 

to live a loathed slave " 984 

deathsman to so base a slave " 1001 

Being your slave, what should I 

do Son 57 1 

But, like a sad slave, stay " 57 11 

that made me first your slave " 58 1 

slave to mortal rage " 64 4 

But slave to slavery " 133 4 

Thy proud heart slave " 141 12 

Slavery— But slave to slavery " 133 4 

Slavish — Paying more tribute R L 299 

Worse than a slavish wipe " 537 

Slay— his crooked tushes slay V A 624 

themselves do slay " 765 

worthless slave of thine I'll slay R L 515 

To slay the tiger " 955 

Will slay the other " 1162 

To slay herself " 1827 

and slay me not by art Son 139 4 

Sleep — sleeps, while now it sleeps V A 786 

When heavy sleep had closed R L 163 

The dove sleeps fast " 360 

Each in her sleep " 404 

From forth dull sleep " 450 

From sleep disturbed " 454 

while the physician sleeps " 904 

evils that obscurely sleep " 1250 

yet it seldom sleeps " 1574 

But when I sleep Son 43 3 

Through heavy sleep " 43 12 

Or, if they sleep " 47 13 

In sleep a king " 87 14 

still did wake and sleep L C 123 

If thou wake he cannot sleep P P 21 54 

Sleeping — into eternal sleeping V A 951 

But she, sound sleeping, fearing R L 363 

So o'er this sleeping soul " 423 

eyes that are sleeping " 1090 

Was sleeping by a virgin hand dis- 

arm'd Son 154 8 

Flocks all sleeping PP 18 42 

Sleided— With sleided silk L C 48 

Slept — have I slept in your report Son S3 5 

Slew — Swearing I slew him R L 518 

old Priam after slew " 1522 

Slide^with swift motion slide Son 45 4 

So slides he down L C 64 

Slight— If my slight Muse do please &re 38 13 

slight air and purging fire " 45 1 

Slip — ^let not advantage slip VA 129 

for fear of slips " 515 



Slipp'd — time hath over-slipp'd her 

thought R L 1576 

Slow — Itlake slow pursuit " 696 

to mark how slow time goes " 990 

With soft-slow tongue " 1220 

but dull and slow she deems " 13.S6 

see time how slow it creeps " 1575 

In two slow rivers " 1738 

by elements so slow Son 44 13 

excuse the slow offence " 51 1 

extremity can seem but slow " 51 6 

going he went wilful-slow " 51 13 

cold and to temptation slow " 94 4 

Slow-sad — with .... gait descended R L 1081 

Sluggard — blame my negligence " 1278 

Sluice — who like sluices stopp'd VA 956 

mine eyes like sluices R L 1076 

Slumber — Now leaden slumber " 124 

my slumbers should be broken Soji 61 3 

Sluttish— of the sluttish ground VA 983 

besmear'd with sluttish time Son 55 4 

Sly— that sly Ulj'sses lent R L 1399 

Small — small head and nostril wide F^ 296 

Small lights are soon blown out R L 647 

of small worth held Son 2 4 

lends not some small glory " 84 6 

Small show of man L C 92 

In the small orb " 289 

Small — it small avails ray mood R L 1273 

Smallest— put to the smallest teen L C 192 

Smart — to guess at others' smarts R L 1238 

Smear — And smear with dust " 945 

Smeared — smeared all with dust " 1381 

Smell— Herbs for their smell VA 165 

the very smell were left me " 441 

hounds mistake their smell " 686 

his smell with others " 691 

smell to the violet " 936 

Unapt for tender smell R L 695 

add the rank smell of weeds Son 69 12 

nor the sweet smell " 98 5 

Nor taste nor smell " 141 7 

Smell — the new -sprung flower to 

smell VA 1171 

smell far worse than weeds Son 94 14 

steal thy sweet that smells " 99 2 

some subtle practice smell P P 19 9 

Smelling — breedethlove by . ... VA 444 

a more sweet-smelling sire " 1178 

Smile— A smile recures the wounding " 465 

While with a joyless smile R L 1711 

5m?7e— dally, smile, and jest V A 106 

smiles as in disdain " 241 

smiles at thee in scorn " 252 

Nor shall he smile at thee R L 1065 

But smile and jest P P 4 12 

sweetly did she smile " 14 7 

Smiled- Whereat she smiled R L 264 

smiled or made some moan LC 217 

Whilst as fickle Fortune smiled PP 21 29 
Smiling— regard and smiling gov- 
ernment RL 1400 

It suffers not in smiling pomp Son 124 6 

were gilded in his smiling L C 172 

I smiling credit her false-speaking PP 1 7 

Smilingly — . . . . with this gives o'er R L 1567 

Smiteth— on a flint he softly smiteth " 176 

Smoke — And blows the smoke of it " 312 

furnace of foul-reeking smoke " 799 



SMOKE 



259 



SO 



19 



Smoke— This helpless .... of words R L 
As smoke from ^tna " 

in their rotten smoke /Sbn 

(STOoi-e— Her face doth reek and .... V A 
Smoking: — Smoking with pride R L 
Smoky — That in their smoky ranks " 
Smootli— My smooth moist hand V A 
the path is smooth " 

Smooth not thy tongue P P 

Smoothing — Thy smoothing titles R L 

Smoothness — smoothness, like a 

goodly champaign plain " 

Smother— I'll smother thee V A 

partially they smother jB L 

with sighs himself doth smother Son 47 

Smother'd — smother'd up in shade V A 

his smother'd light R L 

Another smother'd seems to pelt " 

in love thus smother'd be P P 1 

Smother'st— Thou honesty R L 

Snail — Or, as the snail V A 

Snare — sin's pack-horse, Tirtue's 

snare R L 

Sneaped — And give the sneaped birds " 

Snort — snorts and neighs aloud V A 

Snout — His snout digs sepulchres " 

Snouted — grim, and urchin-snouted 

boar " 

Snow — apt as new-fall'n snow " 

in a gaol of snow " 

As mountain snow melts " 

when sun doth melt their snow R L 

If snow be white Son 130 
Snow-white — love's modest snow- 
white weed R L 

her snow-white dimpled chin " 

like the snow-white swan " 

Snuffing — the hot scent-snuffing 



hounds 
So — Being so enraged 
So soon was she along 
Even so she kiss'd his brow 
So they were dew'd 
So fasten'd in her arms 
So offers he to give 
mine be not so fair 
so shall the day seem night 
Is love so light 
Narcissus so himself 
And so, in spite of death 
So he were like him 
' young ' and so unkind 
borne so hard a mind 
in a tomb so simple 
So did this horse excel 
on so proud a back 
So of concealed sorrow 
that she is so nigh 
So white a friend engirts so white 

a foe 
I am bereft him so 
so full hath fed 
Who is so faint, that dares not be 

so hold 
by love so thriveth 
can so well defend her 
so he will kiss her still 
So is her face illumined 
So thou wilt buy 



VA 



1027 
1042 
4 
555 
438 
783 
143 
788 
8 
, 892 

1247 

, 18 

634 

4 

1035 

783 

1418 

14 

885 

1033 

928 
333 
262 
622 

1105 
354 
362 
750 

1218 
3 

196 
420 
1011 

692 

29 

43 

59 

66 

68 

88 

116 

122 

155 

161 

173 

180 

187 

203 

244 

293 

300 

333 

341 

364 
381 
399 

401 
466 
472 
480 
486 
514 



So— and so say you VA 535 

If you will say so " 536 

pitch the price so high " 551 

What wax so frozen " 565 

so she languisheth " 603 

to withhold me so " 612 

And more than so, presenteth " 631 

seeing thee so indeed " 667 

this to that, and so to so " 713 

so do thy lips " 724 

framing thee so fair " 744 

If so, the world " 761 

so fair a hope is slain " 762 

So in thyself thyself art " 763 

for having so offended " 810 

So glides he in the night " 816 

So did the merciless " 821 

Even so confounded " 827 

twenty times cry so " 834 

of echoes answer so " 840 

She says "Tis so:' they answer 

all ' 'Tis so " 851 

so gloriously behold " 857 

is so much o'erworn " 866 

Even so the timorous " 881 

enemy to be so curst " 887 

So she at these sad signs " 929 

each passion labours so " 969 

pleased her babe so well " 974 

thou art so full of fear " 1021 

treads on it so light " 1028 

So, at his bloody view " 1037 

each part doth so surprise " 1049 

she looks so steadfastly " 1063 

So shall I die by drops " 1074 

and hath kill'd him so " 1110 

And so 'tis thine " .... 1181 

which is so singular R L 32 

envy of so rich a thing " 39 

being so great " 69 

in so false a foe " 77 

that praised her so " 79 

So guiltless she " 89 

so wanteth in his store " 97 

so greets heaven " 112 

are with gain so fond " 134 

And so, by hoping more " 137 

So that in venturing " 148 

So then we do neglect " 152 

So Lucrece must I force " 182 

to so pure a shrine " 194 

is so vile, so base " 202 

with so black a deed " 226 

doth so far proceed " 251 

with so sweet a cheer " 264 

so heedful fear " 281 

So cross him " 286 

a view so false " 292 

so their pride doth grow " 298 

'So, so,' quoth he " 330 

So from himself " 341 

Even so, the curtain drawn " 374 

she reflects so bright " 376 

themselves so beautify " 404 

So o'er this sleeping soul " 423 

So under his insulting falchion " 509 

' So thy surviving husband " 519 

being so applied " 531 

So his unhallow'd haste " 552 



so 



260 



SO 



So — so her accent breaks R . 

So shall these slaves " 

' So let thy thoughts " 

staiu so pure a bed " 

So surfeit-taking Tarquin " 

So fares it " 

so hotly chased " 

to close so pure a mind " 

vapours march so thick " 

So should I have " 

is so absolute " 

' So then he hath it " 

Being so bad " 

For who so base " 

to so base a slave " 

for yielding so " 

through her lips, so vanisheth " 

So am I now " 

thy true affection so " 

So she, deep-drenched " 

So I at each sad strain " 

So with himself " 

So must my soul " 

my body so dishonoured " 

So of shame's ashes " 

My shame so dead " 

serve thou false Tarquin so " 

" So be it " 

unto her maid seem so " 

her two suns were cloud-eclipsed so " 

Even so the maid " 

that they are so fulfiU'd " 

may be so bold " 

So, I commend me " 

better so to clear her " 

Even so this pattern " 

So woe hath wearied woe " 

painter drew so proud " 

did so well resemble " 

the painter was so nice " 

so compact, so kind " 

give her so much grief " 

that burns so long " 

that hath transgressed so " 

why should so many fall " 

So Lucrece, set a-work " 

So mild that Patience " 

but mingled so " 

a show so seeming just " 

And therein so ensconced " 

Into so bright a day " 

So fair a form lodged not a mind 

so ill " 

that so much guile " 
So sober-sad, so weary, and so mild " 

Tarquin armed ; so beguiled " 
So did I Tarquin ; so my Troy did 

perish " 

So Priam's trust " 

act of lust, and so did kill " 

So should my shame " 

with so strong a fear " 

that stops his answer so " 

forced him on so fast " 

Even so his sighs " 

when I might charm thee so " 

that which is so putrifled " 
from heart-easing words so long " 

Weak words, so thick come " 



L 566 


So — He with the Somans was es 






659 


teemed so 


RL 


1811 


666 


wife mistook the matter so 


" 


1826 


684 


blood so unjustly stained 


" 


1836 


698 


And so to publish 


" 


1852 


715 


so gazed on now 


Son 2 


3 


716 


where is she so fair 


8 


5 


761 


who is he so fond 


3 


7 


782 


So thou through windows 


3 


11 


789 


So great a sum 


4 


8 


853 


So thou, thyself 


" 7 


13 


862 


user so destroys it 


" 9 


12 


896 


art so unprovident 


" 10 


2 


1000 


thou art so possess'd 


" 10 


5 


1001 


so fast thou grow'st 


" 11 


1 


1036 


If all were minded so 


" 11 


7 


1041 


So should that beautv 


" 13 


5 


1049 


Who lets so fair a house , 


" 13 


9 


1060 


let your son say so 


" 13 


14 


1100 


So should the lines 


" 16 


9 


1131 


So should my papers 


" 17 


9 


1153 


So long as men 


" 18 


13 


1169 


So long lives this 


" 18 


14 


1185 


So is it not with me 


" 21 


1 


1188 


though not so bright 


" 21 


11 


1190 


So long as youth 


" 22 


2 


1197 


be of thyself so wary 


" 22 


9 


1209 


I will keep so chary 


" 22 


11 


1217 


So I, for fear 


" 23 


5 


1224 


Duty so great, which wit so poor 






1228 


as mine 


" 26 


5 


1258 


So flatter I 


" 28 


11 


1282 


Even so my sun 


" 38 


9 


1308 


So shall those blots 


" 36 


3 


1320 


But do not so 


" 36 


13 


1350 


So I, made lame 


" 37 


3 


1363 


So then I am not lame 


" 37 


9 


1371 


For who's so dumb 


" 38 


7 


1392 


so sweetly doth deceive 


" 39 


12 


1412 


even so doth she abuse 


" 42 


7 


1423 


thy shade shines so 


" 43 


8 


1463 


so much of earth 


" 44 


11 


1468 


by elements so slow 


" 44 


13 


1481 


So, either by thy picture 


" 47 


9 


1483 


for a prize so dear 


" 48 


14 


1496 


So am I as the rich 


" 52 


1 


1505 


so solemn and so rare 


" 52 


5 


1510 


So is the time 


" 52 


9 


1514 


Sweet roses do not so 


" 54 


11 


1515 


And so of you 


" 54 


13 


1518 


So, till the judgement 


" 55 


13 




So, love, be thou 


" 56 


5 


1530 


So true a fool is love 


" 57 


13 


\oU 


your charter is so strong 


" 58 


9 


1542 


waiting so be hell 


" 58 


13 


1544 


So do our minutes 


" 60 


2 




So far from home 


" 61 


6 


1547 


is not so great 


" 61 


9 


1560 


It is so grounded 


" 62 


4 


1636 


so gracious is as mine 


" 62 


5 


1643 


No shape so true 


" 62 


6 


1647 


Self so self-loving 


" 62 


12 


16G4 


are not so stout 


" 65 


7 


1670 


gates of steel so strong 


" 65 


8 


1672 


before these last so bad 


" 67 


14 


1681 


so as foes commend 


" 69 


4 


1750 


that give thee so thine own 


" 69 


6 


1782 


So thou be good 


" 70 


5 


1784 


cannot be so thy praise 


" 70 


11 



so 



261 



SOFT 



So — for I love you so 
Do not so much 
And so should you 
So then thou hast 
So are you to my thoughts as 
so harren of new pride 
So far from variation 
So all my best is 
So is my love still 
so oft as thou wilt look 
So oft have I 
And do so, love 
so dignifies his story 
nature made so clear 
"Tis so, 'tis true 
And so my patent back 
So thy great gift 
to thee I so belong 
disgrace me half so ill 
so shall I taste 
•will not seem so 
But what's so blessed-fair 
So shall I live 
so love's face 
So are those errors 
But do not so 
'tis with so dull a cheer 
thou forget'st so long 
time so idly spent 
So thou prevent'st 
So dost thou too 
Excuse not silence so 
So your sweet hue 
still such, and ever so 
So all their praises 
So that eternal love 
So that myself 
could so preposterously 
So you o'er-green 
In so profound abysm 
You are so strongly 
might I not say so 
Even so, being full 
that so fell sick 
itself so blessed never 
So I return rebuked 
which is so deemed 
so long as brain and heart 
could not so much behold 
Her eyes so suited 
Yet so they mourn 
beauty should look so 
To be so tickled 
so happy are in this 
and in possession so 
so as thou art 
I dare not be so bold 
So, now I have confess'd 
so that other mine 
So him I lose 

So thou, being rich in 'Will 
that I come so near 
so it please thee hold 
upon so foul a face 
Yet do not so 
yet, love, to tell me so 
world is grown so bad 
That I may not be so 
So runn'st thou 



Son 71 


6 


" 71 


11 


" 72 


14 


" 74 


9 


" 75 


1 


" 76 


1 


" 76 


2 


" 76 


11 


" 76 


14 


" 77 


13 


" 78 


1 


" 82 


9 


" 84 


8 


" 84 


10 


" 85 


9 


" 87 


8 


" 87 


11 


" 88 


13 


« 89 


5 


" 90 


11 


" 90 


14 


" 92 


13 


« 93 


1 


" 93 


2 


" 96 


7 


" 96 


13 


" 97 


13 


" 100 


1 


" 100 


6 


" 100 


14 


" 101 


4 


" 101 


10 


" 104 


11 


" 105 


4 


" 106 


9 


" 108 


9 


" 109 


8 


" 109 


11 


" 112 


4 


" 112 


9 


" 112 


13 


" 315 


13 


" 118 


5 


" 118 


14 


" 119 


6 


" 119 


13 


" 121 


3 


" 122 


5 


" 122 


9 


" 127 


10 


" 127 


13 


" 127 


14 


" 128 


9 


" 128 


13 


" 129 


9 


" 131 


1 


" 131 


7 


" 134 


1 


" 134 


3 


" 134 


12 


" 135 


11 


" 136 


1 


" 136 


11 


" 137 


12 


" 139 


13 


" 140 


6 


" 140 


11 


" 140 


13 


" 143 


9 



So— So will I pray Son 143 13 

walls so costly gay " 146 4 
Why so large cost, having so short 

a lease " 146 5 

So Shalt thou feed " 146 13 

to say it is not so " 148 6 

eye is not so true " 148 8 

That is so vex'd " 148 10 

That is so proud " 149 10 

swear against the truth so foul a lie " 152 14 

And so the general of hot desire " 154 7 

so breaking their contents i C 56 

So slides he down " 64 

by nature's outwards so commended" 80 

so with his authorized youth " 104 

So on the tip of his subduing 

tongue " 120 

So many have, that never touch'd " 141 

in honour so forbid " 150 

the sweets that seem so good " 164 

that so their shame did find " 187 

And so much less of shame " 188 

my heart so much as warmed " 191 

so to herself contrives " 243 

What breast so cold " 292 

would not be so lover'd " 320 

which in his cheek so glow'd " 324 

what fool is not so wise JP P 3 13 

Touches so soft still conquer "48 

Yet not so wistly " 6 12 

but not so fair as fickle "71 

so fell she to him " 11 4 

So beauty blemish'd once " 13 11 

The night so pack'd " 15 9 

Air, would I might triumph so " 17 10 

Youth, so apt to pluck a sweet " 17 14 

My sighs so deep " 18 31 

Had women been so strong " 19 23 

teach my tongue to be so long " 19 52 

hear her secrets so bewray'd " 19 54 

to hear her so complain " 21 15 

her griefs so lively shown " 21 17 

Even so, poor bird, like thee " 21 27 

Keep the obsequy so strict P T 12 

So they loved as love in twain " 25 

So between them love did shine " 33 

Simple were so well compounded " 44 

If what parts can so remain " 48 

Sob — And now her sobs VA 222 

Sobbing: — To whom she speaks R L 1088 

Sober— Msking such sober action " 1403 

glory to the sober west Son 132 8 

Shook off my sober guards L G 298 

Sober-sad — So sober-sad, so weary R L 1542 

Society — pleased with grief's society " 1111 

lace itself with his society Son 67 4 

Sod — Her eyes, though sod in tears R L 1592 

Soft — From his soft bosom V A 81 

my flesh is soft " 142 

her soft hand's print " 353 

soft sighs can never grave it " 376 

in my soft lips imprinted " 511 

Not thy soft hands " 633 

In his soft flank " 1053 

tusk in his soft groin " 1116 

to be soft fancy's slave R L 200 

Soft pity enters at an iron gate " 595 

Which on thy soft cheek Son 98 4 

Lending soft audience L C 278 



SOFT 



262 



SON 



RL 



Soft— Touches so soft still conquer P P 

But soft ! enough " 

Soften— soften it with their con- 
tinual motion R L 
Softer— Softer than wax P P 
Softly— on a flint he softly smiteth R L 
And softly cried "Awake " 
Soft-slow- With soft-slow tongue " 
Soil— And the firm soil win Son 
The soil is this, that thou dost " 
Solace- Sorrow changed to solace, 

and solace mix'd with sorrow P P 
SQl(j_sold cheap what is most dear Son 
Soldier— Like soldiers, when their 

captain VA 

Sole— alter not love's sole effect Son 

On the sole Arahian tree P T 

Solemn— This solemn sympathy VA 

And solemn night with slow-sad 

gait R L 

feasts so solemn and so rare Son 

Solicited— the eternal power R L 

Some—' some favour, some remorse V A 
in some mistrustful wood " 

Some catch her by the neck, some 

kiss her face 
Some twine about her thigh " 

fawn hid in some brake " 

some huntsman holloa " 

Behind some hedge " 

That some would sing, some other 

in their bills 
But some untimely thought 
Some loathsome dash " 

Fearing some hard news " 

to some regard " 

or else some shame supposed " 

beheld some ghastly sprite " 

some worthless slave " 

some gentle gust " 

some rascal groom " 

Some purer chest " 

That some impurity " 

With some mischance cross Tarquin " 
some desperate instrument " 

Some happy mean " 

Some dark deep desert " 

I make some hole " 

Some present speed " 

in her some blemish " 

to mourn some newer way " 

As if some mermaid " 

Some high, some low " 

where cares have carved some " 

pleasure of some one " 

Saying, some shape " 

It easeth some " 

' " For some hard-favour'd groom " 
Some of her blood " 

And some look'd black " 

some watery token shows " 

unbless some mother Son 

Make sweet some vial, treasure 

thou some place " 

to some other give " 

But were some child " 

Or some fierce thing " 

I hope some good conceit " 

As if by some instinct " 



49 



.... 591 

7 4 

.... 176 

.... 1628 

.... 1220 

64 7 

69 14 



15 
110 



.... 893 

36 7 

2 

.... 1057 



.... 1081 
52 5 
.... 345 
.... 257 
826 



872 
873 
876 
973 
1094 

1102 

43 

206 

255 

305 

377 

451 

515 

549 

671 

761 

854 

938 

1038 

1045 

, 1144 

, 1175 

. 1307 

. 1358 

. 1365 

. 1411 

. 1412 

. 1445 

. 1478 

. 1529 

. 1581 

. 1632 

. 1742 

. 1743 

.. 1748 

3 4 

5 3 
3 4 
7 13 
3 3 

6 7 
7 



LC . 



PP 



Some— some special instant Son 

you have some part " 

in some antique book " 

If some suspect " 

devise some virtuous lie " 

life hath in this line some interest " 
Some fresher stamp " 

not some small glory " 

forsake me for some fault " 

Some glory in their birth, some in 

their skill " 

Some in their wealth, some in 

their body's force " 

Some in their garments " 

Some in their hawks and hounds, 

some in their horse " 

Some say thy fault is youth, some 

wantonness " 

Some say thy grace is youth " 

some worthless song " 

And in some perfumes " 

some say that thee behold " 

think me some untutor'd youth 
Some beauty peep'd through 
For some, untuck'd, descended 
Some in her threaden fillet 
Where want cries some, but 
as some my equals did 
some feeling pity 
smiled or made some moan 
think me some untutor'd youth 
Which is to me some praise 
Take counsel of some wiser head 
some subtle practice smell 

Something— Make nothing 

add something more 
a something sweet to thee 
Sometime — Sometime he trots 
Sometime he scuds " 

That sometime true news, some- 
time false doth bring " 
Sometime he runs among " 
And sometime where " 
And sometime sorteth " 
Save sometime too much wonder R L 
that sometime threat the spring " 
sometime is comjjacted " 
Sometime her grief is dumb " 
Sometime 'tis mad " 
Yet sometime Tarquin 
Sometime too hot 
from fair sometime declines 
AVhen I am sometime absent 
When sometime lofty towers 
Sometime all full with feasting 
I somethne hold my tongue 
might think sometime 
Sometime diverted their poor balls " 
Sometime a blusterer " 
Sometimes— Sometimes she shakes VA 
Sometimes her arms " 
Yet sometimes falls " 
That sometimes anger thrusts 
Sometimes her levell'd eyes 
sometimes they do extend 
Son— Art thou a woman's son 
dearth of daughters and of sons 
reaves his son of life 
There lives a son 



52 


11 


53 


13 


59 


7 


70 


13 


72 


5 


74 


3 


82 


8 


84 


6 


89 


1 



96 
96 
100 
130 
131 
138 



RL 

Son 



VA 



Son 



L C . 



Son 
LC 



VA 



1 

2 
3 

7 
5 
3 

14 

31 

33 

42 

148 

178 

217 

3 

10 

5 

9 

154 

10 

12 

277 

301 

658 

685 

687 

6S9 

95 

331 

530 

1105 

1106 

1786 

5 

7 

2 

3 

9 

13 

10 

24 

58 

223 

225 

981 

10 

22 

25 

201 

754 

766 

863 



SON 



263 



SOUL 



Son— 'twixt the son and sire VA 1160 

kill'd my son or sire Ji L 232 

To see their youthful sons " 1432 

The sire, the son, the dame " 1477 

check'd his son's desire " 1490 

Then son and father weep " 1791 

unless thou get a son Son 7 14 
let your son say so " 13 14 
when a woman woos, what wo- 
man's son " 41 7 

Song — wanton mermaid's songs V A 777 

Her song was tedious " 841 

A nurse's song " 974 

Whose speechless song Son 8 13 

metre of an antique song " 17 12 

on some worthless song " 100 8 

not dull you with my song " 102 14 

my songs and praises be " 105 3 

For now my song is ended P P 16 16 
Lestthatmy mistress hear my song " 19 50 

Sonnet — And deep-brain'd sonnets L C 209 

Soon — So soon was she along V A 43 

soon she stops his lips " 46 

stains and soon bereaves " 797 

as soon decay'd and done R L 23 

to his hand full soon " o70 

Small lights are soon blown out " 647 

and it will soon be writ " 1295 

As soon as think the place Son 44 8 

And soon to you " 120 11 

To win me soon to hell " 144 5 

To win me soon to hell PP 2 5 

as soon as straw out-burneth " 7 14 

untimely pluck'd, soon vaded " 10 1 
kill'd too soon by death's sharp 

sting " 10 4 

the night would post too soon " 15 13 

A cripple soon can find a halt " 19 10 

Sooner — Enjoy'd no sooner Son 129 5 

and no sooner had " 129 6 

Soothing — Soothing the humour V A 850 

best habit is a soothing tongue PP 1 11 

Sore — heart's deep-sore wounding V A 432 

To one sore sick " 702 

'Gainst venom'd sores " 916 

an eye-sore in my golden coat R L 205 

O unfelt sore " 828 

' his wounds will not be sore " 1568 

'here was the sore PP 9 12 

Sorrow — So of concealed sorrow V A 333 

Sorrow to shepherds " 455 

The night of sorrow " 481 

this night I'll waste in sorrow " 583 

thy death, my living sorrow " 671 

yiew'd each other's sorrow " 963 

Sorrow that friendly sighs " 964 

sorrow seemeth chief " 970 

Sorrow on love hereafter " 1136 

What following sorrow R L 186 

this sorrow to the sage " 222 

what sorrow I shall breed " 499 

modest eyes with sorrow shed " 683 

' In time of sorrow " 991 

true sorrow then is feelingly sufficed " 1012 

warble of her nightly sorrow " 1080 

Old woes, not infant sorrows " 1096 

to herself all sorrow doth compare " 1102 

sad look to her lady's sorrow " 1221 

her face wore sorrow's livery " 1222 



Sorrow — Her certain sorrow writ 

uncertainly R L 1311 

'Tis but a part of sorrow " 1328 

And sorrow ebbs, being blown " 1330 

And shapes her sorrow " 1458 

sorrow, like a heavy-hanging bell " 1493 

pensiveness and colour'd sorrow " 1497 

the current of her sorrow " 1569 

in sorrow's sharp sustaining " 1573 

she gives her sorrow fire " 1604 

his sorrows, make a saw " 1672 

thy sorrow to my sorrow lendeth " 1676 

give his sorrow place " 1773 

Who, mad that sorrow " 1781 

Held back his sorrow's tide " 1789 

My sorrow's interest ; let " 1797 

draw my sorrows longer Son 28 13 
losses are restored and sorrows end " 30 14 

The otfender's sorrow lends " 34 11 
my heart hath 'scaped this sorrow " 90 5 

And for that sorrow " 120 2 

how hard true sorrow hits " 120 10 

Lest sorrow lend me words " 140 3 

with sorrow's wind and rain L C 7 

Not age, but sorrow " 74 

Paler for sorrow P P 9 3 
for I supp'd with sorrow " 14 6 
Sorrow changed to solace and sol- 
ace mix'd with sorrow " 15 11 

Sorrow — If thou sorrow, he will weep " 21 53 

Sorrowing — Careless of thy " 21 26 

Sorry — that the skies were sorry R L 1524 

Make glad and sorry seasons Son 19 5 

Sort — When wilt thou sort an hour R L 899 

And sorts a sad look " 1221 

I love thee in such sort Son 36 13 

I love thee in such sort " 96 13 

Sorteth — sorteth with a herd of 

deer VA 689 

Sought — sought still to dry " 964 

from the blessed thing he sought R L 340 

sought with all my might " 488 

for which I sought to live " 1051 

to imitate the battle sought " 1438 

. many a thing I sought Son 30 3 

They sought their shame L C 187 

For she was sought by spirits " 236 

Against the thing he sought " 313 

Sonl— So o'er this sleeping soul R L 423 

debated even in my soul " 498 

his soul's fair temple is defaced '' 719 

to seize the souls that wander " 882 

Or free that soul " 900 

Sad souls are slain " 1110 

my poor soul's pollution " 1157 

My body or my soul " 1163 

So must my soul " .... 1169 

I may convey this troubled soul " 1176 

My soul and body to the skies " 1199 

Let guiltless souls be freed " 1482 

thence her soul unsheathed " 1724 

the faltering feeble souls " 1768 

vexation of his inward soul " 1779 

And by chaste Lucrece' soul " 1839 

and women's souls amazeth Son 20 8 

In thy soul's thought " 26 8 

my soul's imaginary sight " 27 9 

And all my soul " 62 2 

All tongues the voice of souls " 69 3 



SOUL 



264 



SPEND 



Soul — nor the prophetic soul Son 107 1 
As from my soul " 109 4 
suborn'd informer ! a true soul " 125 13 
If thj"^ soul check thee " 136 1 
Swear to thy blind soul " 136 2 
And will, thy soul knows, is ad- 
mitted " 136 3 
Poor soul, the centre of my sinful 

earth " 146 1 
Then, soul, live thou " 146 9 
My soul doth tell my body " 151 7 
And credent soul to that strong- 
bonded oath L C 279 

All ignorant that soul that sees 

thee PP 5 9 

Sound — false sound enter there V A 780 

But idle sounds " 848 

This sound of hope " 976 

Unprofitable sounds, weak R L 1017 

Deei) sounds make lesser noise " 1329 

quoth she, ' without a sound " 1464 

concord of well tuned sounds Son 8 5 

a far more pleasing sound " 130 10 

Breathed forth the sound " 145 2 

the sweet melodious sound P P 8 9 

To whose sound chaste wings obey P T 4 

Sound — But she, sound sleeping P L 363 

swallow up his sound advice " 1409 

Sound — To sound a parley " 471 

against himself he sounds this 

doom " 717 

wood whose motion sounds Son 128 2 

pipe can sound no deal P P 18 27 

Soundiiisf — heavenly tune harsh- 
sounding V A 431 

Soundless— upon your deep Son 80 10 

Soundly — But soundly sleeps VA 78G 

Sour — that sour unwelcome guest " 449 

is sour to taste " 528 

' This sour informer " 655 

turn to loathed sours R L 867 

Were it not thy sour leisure Son 39 10 

the bitterness of absence sour " 57 7 

Sourest — turn sourest by their deeds " 94 13 

Sour-faced — charging the sour-faced 

groom R L 1334 

Sourins — Souring his cheeks, cries 

'Fie VA 185 

in digestion souring R L 699 

Sourly — which sourly robs from me Son 35 14 

Will sourly leave her " 41 8 

Sovereign — Earth's sovereign salve VA 28 

only sovereign plaster " 919 

a sea, a sovereign king R L 652 

Flatter the mountain-tops with 

sovereign eye Son 33 2 

sovereign mistress over wrack " 126 5 

maladies a sovereign cure " 153 8 

Sovereign— To their salt sovereign R L 650 

Whilst I, my sovereign, watch Son 57 6 

Sovereignty — his boast of Lucrece' 

sovereignty R L 36 

The sovereignty of either " 69 

Space — to die with her a space " 1776 

For then, despite of space Son 44 3 

vow, bond, nor space L C 264 

Distance, and no space was seen P T 30 

Spacious — whose will is large and. . . . Son 135 5 

Spare — for his sake spare me R L 582 



Spare — Spare not to spend P P 19 26 

Sparing — It shall be sparing V A 1147 

sparing justice feeds iniquity R L 1687 

Spark — sparks of flre do fly " 177 

Sparkling — When sparkling stars 

twire not Son 28 12 

Sparrow — hatch in sparrows' nests R L 849 

Speak — And kissing speaks V A 47 

Speak, fair ; but speak fair words " 208 

now she fain would speak " 221 

To whom she speaks " 918 

teach the fool to speak " 1146 

thus speaks advisedly R L 180 

begin ere once she speaks " 567 

To whom she sobbing speaks " 1088 

patience bid fair Lucrece speak " 1268 

I should not live to speak " 1642 

forbade my tongue to speak " 1648 

' O, speak,' quoth she " 1700 

her poor tongue could not speak " 1718 

of such a salve can speak Son 34 7 

Speak of the spring and foison " 53 9 

j'ou for love speak well of me " 72 10 

Speak of my lameness " 89 3 

To speak of that " 100 2 

What's new to speak " 108 3 

I love to hear her speak " 130 9 

might speak ill of thee " 140 10 

Speaking — . ... to those that came R L 1689 

presage-rs of my speaking breast Son ' 23 10 
speaking of your fame " 80 4 

Speaking of worth " 83 8 

dumb thoughts, speaking in effect " 85 14 
credit her false-speaking tongue " 138 7 
credit her false-speaking tongue PP 1 7 

Spear— spear's point can enter VA .... 626 

with his sharp spear " 1112 

for Achilles' image stood his spear P i 1424 

Special — special instant special blest <Son 52 11 

Spectacle — how vile a .... it were R L 631 

a spectacle of ruth PP 9 11 

Speech — Which to his speech V,A 452 

In speech, it seem'd R L 1405 

To blush at speeches rank L C 307 

Speechless — Which woe of his R L 1674 

Whose speechless song Son 8 13 

o'er dull and speechless tribes " 107 12 

Speed — His all-too-timeless speed R L 44 

the headlong fury of his speed " 501 

He in his speed looks " 745 

Bid him with speed prepare " 1294 

Some present speed to come " 1307 

Speed more than speed but dull 

and slow she deems " 1336 

Promise more speed " 1349 

His rider loved not speed Son 50 8 

In winged speed no motion " 51 8 

Speed — when from thee I speed Son 51 2 

My rams speed not P P 18 3 

Speeding — 0, cruel speeding " 18 25 

Speedy— tender smell or flight R L 695 

done with speedy diligence " 1853 

Spend— spend their mouths VA 695 

to spend the night " 847 

Not spend the dowry R L 938 

She hoards, to spend " 1318' 

Lucrece spends her eyes " 1457 

why dost thou spend Son 4 1 

in the world doth spend "99 



SPEND 



265 



SPRINGING 



Spend — no precious time at all to ... . Son 57 3 

in the praise thereof spends all " 80 3 

thy fading mansion spend " Wfi 6 

lour'st on me, do I not spend " 149 7 

To spend her living in eternal love L C 238 

thou hast wherewith to spend P P 21 36 

Spare not to spend " 19 26 

Spend'sl^-spend'st thou thy fury Son 100 3 

Spending— Spending again what is " 76 12 

Spenser — Spenser to me, whose deep 

conceit is such P P 8 7 

Spent — The time is spent VA 255 

The night is spent " 717 

' shall for him be spent R L 1182 

with painted images hath spent " 1577 

to those already spent " 1589 

hath thy fair colour spent " 1600 

what is already spent Son 76 12 

time so idly spent " 100 6 

is my invention spent " 105 11 

and tombs of brass are spent " 107 14 

more than I have spent " 119 14 

in their gazing spent " 125 8 

a beauty spent and done L C 11 

Sphere — out of their spheres been 

fitted Son 119 7 

battery to the spheres intend L C 23 

Spied — spied the hunted boar VA 900 

he spied in her some blemish E L 1358 

in his plain face she spied " 1532 

Spied a blossom passing fair P P 17 3 

Spill — hands such wretched blood 

should spill R L 999 

SpilI'd— on the ground lay spill'd VA 1167 

and too late have spill'd R L 1801 

Spilling — of her drops spilling " 1230 

Spirit — Love is a spirit V A 149 

and her spirit confounds " 882 

spirit, life, and bold audacity R L 1346 

The spirit of love Son 56 8 

Is it thy spirit " 61 5 

My spirit is tliine " 74 8 

Knowing a better spirit " 80 2 

that able spirit affords " 85 7 

Was it his spirit, by spirits taught " 86 5 

Hath put a spirit of youth " 98 3 

figured to thee my true spirit " 108 2 

The expense of spirit in a waste " 129 1 

Which like two spirits " 144 2 

The worser spirit a woman " 144 4 

My spirits to attend L C . 3 

spirits of richest coat " 236 

That like two spirits P P 2 2 

My worser spirit a woman "24 

Spite — so in spite of death V A 173 

this is my spite " 1133 

thus breathes she forth her spite R L 762 

what spite hath thy fair colour 

spent " 1600 

in our lives a separable spite Son 36 6 

by fortune's dearest spite " 37 3 

Kill me with spites " 40 14 

Join with the spite of fortune " 90 3 

petty griefs have done their spite " 90 10 

Since, spite of him, I'll live " 107 11 

but spite of heaven's fell rage L C 13 

In spite of physic P P 13 12 

alas, it was a spite " 16 7 

Spile — To spite me now " 15 15 



Spleen — A thousand spleens V A 907 

Adon used to cool his spleen P P 6 6 

Splendour— Against the golden .... RL 25 

with all-triumphant splendour Son 33 10 

Spoil — sweetness of the spoil V A 553 

Leaving his spoil perplex'd R L 733 

To spoil antiquities " 951 

his spoil of beauty Son 65 12 
make Time's spoils despised " 100 12 
and his amorous spoil L C 154 

Spoil'd — spotted, spoil'd, corrupted R L 1172 

Spoke — then he had spoke V A 943 

If he had spoke " 1097 

Spongy — his spongy lungs bestow'd L C 326 

Sport — such time-beguiling sport V A 24 

our sport is not in sight " 124 

with such-like sport " 844 

and his time of sport R L 992 

comments on thy sport Son 95 6 

thy grace is youth and gentle sport " 96 2 

Playing patient sports L C 242 

Youth is full of sport P P 12 5 

All our evening sport " 18 47 

Sport — learn'd to sport and dance V A 105 

where I list to sport me " 154 

Sporting — Advice is sporting R L 907 

Sportive — For sportive words " 1813 

salutation to my sportive blood Son 121 6 

Spot — That spots and stains R L 196 

The spots whereof could weeping 

pxirify " 685 

To clear this spot by death " 1053 

Doth spot the beauty Son 95 3 

Spotless — Immacvilate and spotless R L 1656 

Spotted — To ask the spotted princess " 721 

spotted, spoil'd, corrupted " 1172 

Spread — . . . . upon the blushing rose VA 590 

through all her sinews spread " 903 

The fishes spread on it " 1100 

through all her body spread R L 1266 

their fair leaves spread Son 15 5 

Spreading — have been a . . . . flower L C 75 

Spright — with a lazy spright V A 181 

weariness with heavy spright R L 121 

Her winged spright " 1728 

Spring — The tender spring upon V A 127 

Spring doth yearly grow " 141 

Love's tender spring " 656 

Love's gentle spring " 801 

Thy hasty spring still blasts RL 49 

sometime threat the spring " 331 

thy vices bud before thy spring " 604 

wait on the tender spring " 869 

and cherish springs " 950 

AVanting the spring " 1455 

herald to the gaudy spring Son 1 10 

Speak of the spring " 53 9 

the treasure of his spring " 63 8 

have I been absent in the spring " 98 1 
and then but in the spring " 102 5 

Three beauteous springs " 104 5 

and vaded in the spring P P 10 2 

Spring — Seeds spring from seeds V A 167 

Away he springs " 258 

amountain-springthatfeedsadalePi 1077 

Trees did grow and plants did 

spring PP 21 6 

Clear wells spring not " 18 37 

Springing — If springing things VA 417 



SPRITE 



266 



STATE 



Sprite — beheld some ghastly sprite H L 451 

Sprung — A purple flower sprung up VA 1168 

the new-sprung flower to smell " 1171 

Spur — curb or pricking spur " 2S5 

The bloody spur cannot provoke 

him Son 50 9 

Then should I spur " 51 7 

Spurn — Spurns at his love VA 311 

In vain I spurn at my eonfirm'd R L 1026 

Spurn'st — 'Tis thou that spurn'st at 

right " 880 

Spurring — Spurring to his side Son 50 12 

Spy — one that spies an adder VA 878 

in her haste unfortunately spies " 1029 

by the light he spies R L 316 

■where none may spy him " 881 

through every cranny spies " 1086 

Spy — this bate-breeding spy V A 655 

why are frailer spies Son 121 7 

Spying — He spying her, bounced in P P 6 13 

Stage — and beats these from the 

stage R L 278 

Black stage for tragedies " 766 

That this huge stage presenteth Son 15 3 
an unperfect actor on the stage " 23 1 

Stain — Stain to all nymphs VA 9 

The stain upon his silver down R L 1012 

How may this forced stain " 1701 

from this compelled stain " 1708 

Her body's stain " 1710 

bring water for my stain Son 109 8 

Stain — stains and soon bereaves V A 797 

And stains her face " 1122 

Virtue would stain that o'er with iJ i 56 

murder wakes to stain " 168 

stains love's modest snow-white 

weed " 196 

Who see"ks to stain the ocean " 655 

should stain so pure a bed " 684 

Suns of the world may stain Son 33 14 

stain both moon and sun " 35 3 

Stained — all stain'd with gore V A 664 

stained taste of violated troth R L 1059 

My stained lilood to Tarquia " 1181 

had stain'd her stain'd excuse " 1316 

Like bright things stain'd " 1435 

be stain'd with this abuse " 1655 

and that false Tarquin stain'd " 1743 

this chaste blood so unjustly 

stained " 1836 

so preposterously be stain'd Son 109 11 

Staineth — breaks before it staineth V A 460 

when heaven's sun staineth Son 33 14 

Stale — For now 'tis stale to sigh R L 1362 

Of stale example L C 268 

Stalk— She crops the stalk VA 1175 

wickedly he stalks R L 365 

Reserved the stalk L C 147 

Stalled— The steed is stalled up VA 39 

And stall'd the deer P P 19 2 

Stanip^He stamps and bites V A 316 

To stamp the seal of time R L 941 

Some fresher stamp Son 82 8 

Stanip'd — Reproach is stamp'd R L 829 

stamp'd the semblance " 1246 

stamp'd upon my brow Son 111 2 

Stand — now stand on end VA 272 

or his 'Stand, I say " 284 

Stands on his hinder legs " 693 



Stand — my lieart stands armed V A 

Thus stands she " 

And they would stand auspicious R L 

he stands dis^aced " 

deer that stands at gaze " 

these pretty creatures stand " 

you see grave Nestor stand " 

that thou dost trembling stand " 

in them doth stand disgraced " 

Now stand you on the top Son 16 

stand against thy sight " 38 

although my foot did stand " 44 

And nothing stands " 60 

in hope my verse shall stand " 60 

fearfully on thorns did stand " 99 

which methinks still doth stand " 104 

all alone stands hugely politic " 124 

stands least in thj' control " 125 

by thee blushing stand " 128 

To stand in thy affairs " 151 

that did in freedom stand L C 

from judgement stand aloof " 

these impediments stand forth " 

Herds stand weeijing P P 18 
A woman's nay doth stand for 

nought " 19 

Stand — march'dontomakehisstandP L 



PP 

VA 
RL 
VA 



RL 



Son 



Her stand slie takes 
Standing — that is standing by 

for standing by her side 
Star — Look, how a bright star 

shining star doth borrow 

stars ashamed of day 

Where mortal stars, as bright 

No comfortable star did lend 

Which must be lode-star 

But little stars may hide them 

And little stars shot 

Not from the stars 

And constant stars 

the stars in secret influence 

are in favour with their stars 

Till whatsoever star 

sparkling stars twire not 

the star to every wandering bark 

Nor that full star 

Co-supremes and stars of love 
Stare — and there he stares 

in her sad face he stares 
Stiir-gazers— That the star-gazers 
Staring — The staring ruffian 

Staring on Priam's wounds 
Stark — And stood stark naked 
Start — Anon he starts 

Whereat she starts 

Even there he starts 

I did begin to start and cry 

By this starts Collatine 
Startetli — from her be-tunibled 

couch she starteth 
Starved — clean starved for a look 
State — of his happy state 

his aff'airs, his friends, his state 

That thou shalt see thy state 

low vassals to thy state 

scandal waits on greatest state 

companions at thy state 

clothes his wit in state and pride 

And wear their brave state Son 



PT . 

VA . 

RL . 

VA . 

RL . 
PP 

VA , 

RL . 



Son 
RL 



779 

895 

347 

718 

1149 

1233 

1401 

1599 

1833 

5 

6 

5 

12 

13 

8 

11 

11 

14 

8 

12 

143 

166 

269 

41 

42 

438 

5 

282 

425 

815 

861 

1032 

13 

164 

179 

1008 

1525 

1 

10 

4 

1 

9 

12 

7 

7 

51 

301 

1591 

509 

1149 

1448 

10 

302 

878 

348 

1639 

1772 

1037 

10 

16 

45 

644 

666 

1006 

1066 

1809 



STATE 



267 



STILL 



State — beweep my outcast state Son 29 2 

and then my state " 29 10 

change my state ivith kings " 29 14 

such interchange of state " 64 9 

Or state itself confounded " 64 10 

I see a better state " 92 7 

the strength of all thy state " 96 12 

to medicine a liealthful state " 118 11 

were but the child of state " 124 1 

they would change their state " 128 9 

compare thou thine own state " 142 3 

she saw my woeful state " 145 4 

shouldst not abhor my state " 150 12 
Stately — till with worm-holes stately 

monuments R L 946 

Statue — Statue contenting but the 

eye VA 213 

statues, tombs, and stories " 1013 

war shall statues overturn Son 55 5 
Statute— The statute of thy beauty " 134 9 

Stay — each murmur stay V A 706 

to make her stay " 873 

dare not stay the field " 894 

with his torch to make him stay R L 311 

could not stay him " 323 

doth Tarquin stay " 423 

She stays, exclaiming " 741 

upon his silver down will stay " 1012 

a little while doth stay " 1364 

on sightless eyes doth stay Son 43 12 

where thou dost stay " 44 4 

it might unused stay " 48 3 

stay and think of nought " 57 11 

bound to stay your leisure " 58 4 

still with thee shall stay " 74 4 
no longer than thy love will stay " 92 3 

the thing she would have stay " 143 4 

flesh stays no farther reason " 151 8 

what will not stay L C 159 

Stay — Who with a lingering stay S L 328 

conceit of this inconstant stay Son 15 9 

Stay'd — or river stay'd VA 331 

but he was stay'd by thee R L 917 

and there she stay'd " 1275 

Stay'st— thou stay'st too long P P 12 12 

Steadfast— with a steadfast eye R L 1339 

Steadftistly— looks so steadfastly VA 1063 

Steal — Steal thine own freedom " 160 

Lest she should steal a kiss " 726 

and to steal his breath " 934 

Away he steals R L 283 

Such devils steal effects " 1555 

Which steals men's eyes Son 20 8 

Yet dotii it steal sweet hours " 36 8 

steal thee all my poverty " 40 10 
And steal dead seeing of his living 

hue " 67 6 

the filching age will steal " 75 6 

to steal thyself away " 92 1 
whence didst thou steal thy sweet " 99 2 

Steal from his figure " 104 10 
Stealetli — through the dark night 

he stealeth R L 729 

Stealing — How she came stealing V A 344 

by his stealing in " 450 

stealing moulds from heaven " 730 

Stealing unseen to west Son 33 8 

Stealing away the treasure " 63 8 

Stealth— by thy dial's shady stealth " 77 7 



Steam — feedeth on the steam V A 63 

Steed— to alight thy steed " 13 

The steed is stalled up " 39 

The strong-neck'd steed " 263 

a well-proportion'd steed " ..... 290 

by the well-doing steed L C 112 

Steel— Stfong-temper'd steel V A Ill 

flinty, hard as steel " 199 

water that doth eat in steel RL 755 

antiquities of hammer'd steel " 951 

Nor gates of steel so strong Son 65 8 

were brass or hammer'd steel " 120 4 

in thy steel bosom's ward " 133 9 

Steel— ihy hard heart do steel it VA 375 

Steel'd — And being steel'd " 376 

That my steel'd sense Son 112 8 

Steep— do not steep thy heart R L 1828 

love-kindling fire did quickly steep 5o?i 153 3 
Steep-up- the steep-up heavenly hill "75 
stand she takes upon a steep-up 
bill pp 9 5 

Steepy — travelled on to age's steepy 

night Son 63 5 

Stell'd — where all distress is ... . R L 1444 

hath play'd the painter and hath 
stell'd . Son 24 1 

Step— as if he told the steps V A 277 

lurking serpent steps aside R L 362 

Stern — by the stern and direful god VA 98 

To creatures stern sad tunes R L 1147 

cover crimes with bold stern looks " 1252 

might the stern wolf betray Son 96 9 

Steward — but stewards of their ex- 
cellence " 94 8 

Stick — the green sticks fast VA 527 

wherein her needle sticks R L 317 

She will not stick to round me P P 19 51 
Stick'st — thou stick'st not to con- 
spire Son 10 6 

Stifle— To stifle beauty VA 934 

Still— Still she entreats " 73 

Still is he sullen, still he lours and 

frets " 75 

still is left alive " 174 

Her eyes woo'd still " 358 

be still as much " 442 

So he will kiss her still " 480 

their verdure still endure " 507 

still to be sealing " 512 

still hanging by his neck " 593 

he whetteth still " 617 

let him keep his loathsome cabin 

still " 637 

foes pursue him still " 699 

still concludes in woe " 839 

And still the choir of echoes answers" 840 

Sought still to dry " 964 

but is still severe " 1000 

bids them still consort " 1041 

still looketh for a grave " 1106 

Thy hasty spring still blasts R L 49 

makes them still to fight " 68 

pineth still for more " 98 

True valour still, a true " 201 

the fear doth still exceed " 229 

for vantage still " 249 

yet he still pursues " 308 

might have reposed still " 382 

the onset still expecting " 432 



STILL 



268 



STOOD 



Still— she with vehement prayers 

urgeth still R L 475 

monarchs still are fear'd for love " (ill 

she controlled still " 727 

And therefore would they still " 752 

hereafter still be blind " 758 

Keep still possession " 803 

And therefore still in night " 1085 

unpractised swimmer plunging still" 1098 

I'll hum on Tarquin still " 1133 

Extremity still urgeth " 1337 

eyes wailing still " 1508 

And still on him she gazed, and 

gazing still " 1531 

should my shame still rest " 1643 

To accessary yieldings, but still 

pure " 1658 

of her blood still pure " 1742 

still doth red abide " 1749 

substance still lives Son 5 14 
adore his beauty still "77 
and still weep "95 
still the world enjoys it " 9 10 
beauty still may live " 10 14 
To give away yourself keeps your- 
self still ." 16 13 
in my bosom's shop is hanging 

still " 24 7 
still farther off " 28 8 
yet I have still the loss " 34 10 
For still temptation follows " 41 4 
art present still with me " 47 10 
And I am still with them " 47 12 
praise shall still find room " 55 10 
and he in them still green " 63 14 
may still shine " 65 14 
still with thee shall stay " 74 4 
Why write I still all one " 76 5 
you and love are still my argument " 76 10 
So is my love still telling " 76 14 
You still shall live " 81 13 
Muse in manners holds her still " 85 1 
still cry ' Amen " 85 6 
May still seem love " 93 3 
Yet seem'd it winter still " 98 13 
Such seems your beauty still " 104 3 
still such, and ever so " 105 4 
Still constant in a wondrous ex- 
cellence "105 6 
that which still doth grow " 115 14 
Still losing when I saw myself " 119 4 
by evil still made better " 119 10 
still will pluck thee back " 126 6 
She may detain, but not still keep, 

her treasure " 126 10 

to be my comfort still " 134 4 

am I that vex thee still "135 3 

yet receives rain still " 135 9 

and love that still " 136 13 

spirits do suggest me still " 144 2 

a fever, longing still " 147 1 

still to endure " 153 6 

in her threaden fillet still did bide L C 33 

still did wake and sleep " 123 

two spirits do suggest me still P P 2 2 
Touches so soft still conquer chas- 
tity "48 
the loss thereof still fearing " 7 10 
I craved nothing of thee still " 10 10 



Still— still to strive with men P P 19 43 

Still — pure thoughts are dead and 

still B L 167 

in still imagination " 702 

The nurse, to still her child " 813 

Stone-still, astonish'd with " 1730 

which methinks still doth stand Son 104 11 
and my loud crying still " 143 14 

StiU'd—still'd with dandling VA 562 

Still-gazing — wonder of ... . eyes R L 84 

Stillitory — the stillitory of thy face F-l 443 

Still-pining — But like still-pining 

Tantalus RL 858 

Still-slaughter'd — armour of still- 

slaugliter'd lust " 188 

Sting — disdainfully did sting " 40 

at the mercy of his mortal sting •' 364 

honey guarded with a sting " 493 

hath neither sting, knot, nor L C 265 

by death's sharp sting P P 10 4 

Stir — rider's angry stir V A 283 

careless lust stirs up " 556 

the strumpet that began this stir R L 1471 

Stirr'd — stirr'd by a painted beauty Son 21 2 

Stirring — at stirring of a feather 1^.4 302 

Myself was stirring B L 1280 

Stock— who did thy stock pollute " 1063 

Stole— But stole his blood VA 1056 

Now stole upon the time R L 162 

and he stole that word Son 79 9 
my white stole of chastity L C 297 

Stol'n — the treasure stol'n away R L 1056 

but stol'n from forth thy gate " 1068 

religious love stol'n from mine eye Son 31 6 
thou wilt be stol'n, I fear " 48 13 

buds of marjoram had stol'n " 99 7 

nor red, nor white, had stol'n " 99 10 

it had stol'n from thee " 99 15 

Stone — stone at rain relenteth V A 200 

cold and senseless stone " 211 

That from the cold stone R L 177 

For stones dissolved to water " 592 

no harder than a stone " 593 

And waste huge stones " 959 

Stone him with harden'd hearts, 

harder than stones " 978 

Like stones of worth Son 52 7 

than unswept stone " 55 4 

Since brass, nor stone " 65 1 

are themselves as stone " 94 3 

Each stone's dear nature L C 210 

each several stone " 215 

Stone-still— Stone-still, astonish'd R L 1730 

'Stonished — 'stonish'd as night- 
wanderers V A 825 

Stood — How like a jade he stood " 391 

falleth in the place she stood " 1121 

upon their whiteness stood " 1170 

had Narcissus seen her as she 

stood RL 265 

for Achilles' image stood his spear " 1424 

Stood for the whole " 1428 

Stood many Trojan mothers " 1431 

both stood like old acquaintance " 1595 

Stood CoUatine and all " 1731 

like a late-sack'd island vastly stood " 1740 

wavering stood in doubt L C 97 

And stood stark naked P P 6 10 

bounced in, wheresis he stood " 6 13 



STOOP 



269 



STRENGTH 



Stoop— The grass stoops not VA 1028 

And stoop to honour iZ L 57-1 

The cedar stoops not " 664 

Stop — soon slie stops his lips VA 46 

stop the loud pursuers " 688 

Each shadow makes him stop " 706 

which stop the hourly dial HL 327 

Or stop the headlong fury " 501 

made me stop my breath " 1180 

that stops his answers so " 1G64 

The protestation stops " 1700 

to stop posterity Son 3 8 

should not stop my way " 44 2 

And stops her pipe " 102 8 

Counsel may stop awhile i C 159 

S(op— loves no stops nor rests S L 1124 

what course, what stop he makes L C 109 

Stopped — An oven that is stopp'd VA 331 

who, like sluices, stopja'd " 956 

Her voice is stopp'd " 1061 

Who, being stopp'd, the bounding i2 i 1119 

and to flatterer stopped are Son 112 11 

Store — so wanteth in his store H L 97» 

is rifled of her store " 692 

that breeds the fat earth's store " 1837 

Nature hath not made for store Son 11 9 

to store thou wouldst convert " 14 12 

engrafted to this store " 37 8 
Increasing store with loss and loss 

with store " 64 8 

immured is the store " 84 3 

addefh to his store " 135 10 

Thougli in thy store's account " 136 10 

to aggravate thy store " 146 10 

But if store of crowns be scant P P 21 37 

Store — O, him she stores »Sb« 67 13 

as for a map doth Nature store - " 68 13 

Storm — I could prevent this storm R L 966 

such black-faced storms " 1518 

Foretell new storms " 1589 

was he such a storm L C 101 

Storm-beaten— on my face Son 34 6 

Storming — Storming her world L C 7 

Stormy— But like a stormy day V A 965 

of stormy blustering weather R L 115 

Against the stormy gusts of win- 
ter's day Son 13 11 

Story — the story aptly ends V A 716 

Their copious stories " 845 

statues, tombs, and stories " 1013 

Thestoryof sweet chastity's decay P 7/ 808 

to still her child will tell ray story " 813 

Sinon whose enchanting story " 1521 

so dignifies his story Son 84 8 

I can set down a story " 88 6 

tells the story of thy days " 95 5 

any summer's story tell " 98 7 

A plaintful story L C 2 

She told him stories JP P i 5 

Stonj — He stories to her ears RL 106 

Stout — are not so stout Son 65 7 

Stoutly— but stoutly say " So be it R L 1209 

Stow — in her vanity prison stows 

the day " 119 

Straggling — And they like strag- 
gling slaves " 428 

Straight — to her straight goes he VA 264 

And straight in pity " 1091 

straight be strucken down R L 217 



Straight — as one shifts, another 

straight ensues R L 1104 

is blotted straight with will " 1299 

I'll murder straight " 1634 

and straight grow sad Son 45 14 

and I straight will halt " 89 3 

Return, forgetful Muse, and straight " 100 5 
but despised straight " 129 5 

Straight in her heart " 145 5 

Straight — straight legs and passing 

strong VA 297 

I may be straight Son 121 11 

Bear thine eyes straight " 140 14 

Strain— They all strain courtesy VA 888 

at each sad strain will strain R L 1131 

And other strains of woe Son 90 13 

Strained — What strained touches " 82 10 

Strait— Back to the strait R L 1670 

Strand — And from the strand of 

Dardan " 1436 

Strange — O strange excuse VA 791 

how strange it seems " 985 

the impression of strange kinds R L 1242 

millions of strange shadows Son 53 2 

and to compounds strange " 76 4 

strangle aod look strange " 89 8 

frowns and wrinkles strange " 93 8 

nothing novel, nothing strange " 123 3 
Against strange maladies " 153 8 

all strange forms receives L C 303 

Strangely — when thou shalt strange- 
ly pass Son 49 5 
askance and strangely " 110 6 

Strangeness — puts on outward .... VA 310 

Measure my strangeness " 524 

Stranger— unto every stranger " 790 

never coped with stranger eyes R L 99 

to find a stranger just " 159 

A stranger came, and on that pillow " 1620 

Strangle — strangle and look strange Son 89 8 

Straw — I force not argument a . . . . R L 1021 

a platted hive of straw L C 8 

as straw with fire flameth P P 7 13 
as soon as straw out-burneth " 7 14 
A belt of straw and ivy buds " 20 13 
Stray — Stray lower, where the pleas- 
ant VA 234 

Straying — thy beauty and thy stray- 
ing youth * Son 41 10 
Stream — strive against the stream V A ...'.. 7T2 

The petty streams that pay R L 649 

Shall gush pure streams " 1078 

Lucrece' bleeding stream " 1774 

Gilding pale streams Son 33 4 

to the stream gave grace L C 285 

Stream'd — Blue circles stream'd R L 1587 

Street — from forth her fair streets " 1834 

Strength — govern'd him in ... . V A 42 

his stronger strength obeyed " Ill 

thus ray strength is tried " 280 

with life's strength doth fight R L 124 

her passion's strength renews " 1103 

Then little strength rings out " 1495 

Whose strength's abundance Son 23 4 

And in mine own love's strength '" 23 7 
make grief's strength seem stronger " 28 14 
thou hast the strength of laws " 49 13 

strength by limping sway disabled " 66 8 
the strength of all thy state " 96 12 



STRENGTH 



270 



SUBSCRIBE 



Strength — There is such strength Son 150 7 
strive to try her strength P P 19 19 

Streiigthen'd— My love is ... . Son 102 1 

Strengthless— Two .... doves VA 153 

knit brow, and strengthless pace R L 709 

Stretched— And stretched metre Son 17 12 

Strict — From their strict embrace V A 874 

Keep the obsequy so strict P T 12 

Strife — with herself at strife V A 11 

workmanship at strife " 291 

civil home-bred strife " 764 

revenge or quittal of such strife R L 23G 

there were no strife " 405 

doth force a furtlier strife " 689 

sort an hour great strifes to end " 899 

to show the painter's strife " 1377 

weep with equal strife " 1791 

I hold such strife Son 75 3 

Strike— strikes her on the cheeks VA 475 

strikes whate'er is in his way " 623 

And whom he strikes " 624 

thou shouldst strike at it " 938 

to strike him dead " 948 

Strike the wise dumb " 1146 

strike a poor unseasonable doe R L 581 

Strikes each in each Son 8 10 

the deer that thou shouldst strike P P 19 2 

Striking — what needs a second .... VA 250 

his beating lieart, alarum striking R L 433 

String— Shall tune our heart-strings " 1141 

Mark how one string, sTfeet hus- 
band to anotlier Son 8 9 

Stripi)'d— they be out-stripp'd by 

every pen " 32 6 

Stripping— Out^stripping crows that 

strive VA 324 

Strive — strive to overfly them " 324 

all in vain you strive " 772 

ever strive to kiss you " 1082 

They both would strive " 1092 

Yet strive I to embrace R L 504 

as he is, he strives in vain " 1665 

all the world, and I must strive Son 112 5 
I did strive to prove " 117 13 

mastering what not strives L C 240 

she strive to try her strength P P 19 19 
still to strive with men " 19 43 

Strived— beauty and virtue strived R L 52 

Striving— As striving who should. VA ..... 968 
then, striving to mend Son 103 9 

Stroke— doth she stroke his cheek VA 45 

curse thee for this stroke " 945 

Strong— straight legs and passing.... " 297 

never waxetli strong " 420 

with his strong course " 9G0 

My will is strong R L 243 

strong pirates, shelves, and sands " 335 

From me by strong assault " 835 

and they too strong " 865 

with circumstances strong " 1262 

Mine enemy was strong " 1646 

with so strong a fear " 1647 

By our strong arms " 1834 

Resembling strong youth Son 7 6 

the strong offence's cross " 34 11 

your charter is so strong " 58 9 

Nor gates of steel so strong " 65 8 

what strong hand can hold " 65 11 

which makes thy love more strong " 73 13 



Strong — 'gainst my strong infection Son 111 10 

Divert strong minds " 115 8 

more strong, far greater " 119 12 
replication prompt and reason 

strong L C 122 

I strong o'er them, and you o'er 

me being strong " 257 

Had women been so strong P P 19 23 
Strong-besieged — the walls of 

strong-besieged Troy R L 1429 

Strong-bonded— to that oath L C 279 

Stronger — his .... strength obey'd V A Ill 

make conquest of the stronger R L 1767 

make grief's strength seem 

stronger Son 28 14 

is no stronger than a flower " 65 4 

Strongest — The strongest body VA 1145 

The strongest castle P P 19 29 

Strongly — but strongly he desired R L 415 

my duty strongly knit Son 26 2 
You are so strongly in my purpose 

bred " 112 13 

Strong.neck'd— The steed VA 263 

Strong-teniper'd— steel " Ill 

Struck — Struck dead at first " 250 

His meaning struck her " 462 

Which struck her sad, and R L 262 

he struck his hand upon his breast " 1842 

that struck me dead Son 86 6 

Strucken— straight be down R L 217 

Struggle— he struggles to be gone VA 227 

Nay, do not struggle " 710 

Struggling — Struggling for passage " 1047 

Strumpet — Show me the strumpet R L 1471 

Strumpeted — maiden virtue rudely 

strumpeted Son 66 6 

Stuck — stuck over all his face LC 81 

Stud — coral clasps and amber studs P P 20 14 

Studded— The studd(jd bridle VA 37 

Study— Study his bias leaves PP 5 5 

Stuff- Stuff up his lust RL 297 

Stuff 'd— Till either gorge be stuflF'd VA 58 

Sturdy — like sturdy trees support me " 152 

Style— Theirs for their style Son 32 14 

thou dost but mend the style " 78 11 

Making his style admired " 84 12 

Subdue — did her force subdue L C 248 

Subdued — my nature is subdued Son \11 6 

pensive and subdued desires L C 219 

Subduing — tip of his subduing tongue " 120 

Subject — tributary subject quakes V A 1045 

Where subjects' eyes do learn R L 616 

her subjects with foul insurrection " 722 

want subject to invent Son 38 1 

To subjects worse have given " 59 14 

Of their fair subject " 82 4 

That to his subject lends " 84 6 

to lend base subjects light " 100 4 

To mar the subject " 108 10 

(Swft/«c<— Making it subject VA 737 

Subject and servile " 1161 

As subject to Time's love Son 124 3 
Subjection — by their mortal fault 

brought in subjection R L 724 

Proud of subjection L C 108 

Subornation— perjury and .... RL 919 

Suborn'd — Hence, thou. . . . informer iSbra 125 13 
Subscribe — and Death to me sub- 
scribes " 107 10 



SUBSIST 



271 



SUGAR'D 



LC 


.... 


PP 


19 


RL 




VA 




Son 


138 


PP 


15 


RL 




Son 


19 


RL 




Son 


2 


r " 


127 



Subsist — by nature to subsist Son 122 

Substance — their substance still lives " 5 

doth such substance give " 87 

If the dull substance " 44 

What is your substance " 63 

Substantial — Feed'st thy light's ' 

flame with self-substantial fuel " 1 
Subtle — Swift subtle post, carrier R L 

To ruock the subtle " 

even as subtle Sinon 

a plenitude of subtle matter 

some subtle practice smell 
Subtle-shining — the .... secrecies 
Subtlety — which lives by subtlety 

in the world's false subtleties 
Succour — shine sun to ... . flowers 
Succeeding — in succeeding times 

pattern to succeeding men 
Success — greets heaven for his .... 
Succession — Proving his beauty by 

succession thine 
Successive — beauty's successive heir 
Sucli — such time-beguiling sport VA 

with such distilling showers 

I am such a park 

He held such petty bondage 

Were never four such lamps 

tricks, and such disdain 

kisses such a trouble 

Such nectar from his lips 

with such foul fiends 

thou provokest such weeping 

such a weak and silly mind 

the birds such pleasure took 

at such high-proud rate R 

to such a peerless dame 

margents of such books 

and such griefs sustain 

there is such thwarting strife 

Such hazard now 

quittal of such strife 

where such treasure lies 

fearing no such thing 

proud of such a dignity 

Such shadows are 

batter such an ivory wall 

With such black payment 

darest do such outrage 

of such shame 

bear such shameful blows 

in such a devil 

such numbers seek for thee 

Such wretched hands such wretch- 
ed blood 

would such an office have 

Such danger to resistance 

still urgeth such extremes 

Such harmless creatures 

Such sweet observance 

Making such sober action 

such signs of rage 

such odd action yield 

such black-faced storms 

hell-born sin such saint-like forms 

Such signs of truth 

can lurk in such a look 

But such a face 

Such devils steal effects 

such unity do hold 



6 
14 

10 
1 
1 

G 

926 

957 

1541 

302 

9 

101 

675 

4 

16 

625 

12 

112 

12 

3 

24 

66 

239 

394 

489 

501 

522 

672 

638 

949 

1016 

1101 

19 

21 

102 

139 

143 

155 

236 

280 

363 

437 

460 

464 

576 

605 

618 

832 

847 

896 

999 
1000 
1265 
1337 
1347 
1385 
1403 
1419 
1433 
1518 
1519 
1532 
1535 
1540 
1555 
1558 



Such — such passion her assails R L 1562 

Seeing such emulation " 1808 

Such childish humour " 1825 

In such relenting dew " 1829 

such murderous shame Son 9 14 

I read such art " 14 10 

Such heavenly touches " 17 8 

of such triumph bars " 25 3 

such wealth brings " 29 13 

such a beauteous day " 34 1 

of such a salve can speak " 34 7 

Such civil war " 35 12 

I love thee in such sort " 36 13 

doth such substance give " 37 10 

Hang on such thorns " 54 7 

truth of such account " 62 6 

For such a time " 63 9 

such interchange of state " 64 9 

the twilight of such day " 73 5 

the glowing of such fire •' 73 9 

I hold such strife " 75 3 

found such fair assistance " 78 2 

such virtue hath my pen " 81 13 

And such a counterpart " 84 11 

but waking no such matter " 87 14 

Such is my love " 88 13 

I love thee in such sort " 96 13 

having such a scope " 103 2 

Such seems your beauty " 104 3 

still such, and ever so " 105 4 

Even such a beauty " 106 8 
Such cherubins as your sweet self 

resemble " 

At such who, not born fair " 

But no such roses " 

There is such strength " 

was he such a storm L C 

do again for such a sake " 

Such looks as none could look P P 

with such an earthly tongue " 

whose deep conceit is such " 

Such-like — In such-like circum- 
stance, with such-like sport V A 844 

And with such-like flattering P P 21 41 

Suck'd — she had not suck'd VA 572 

suck'd an earthly mother " 863 

And suck'd the honey R L 840 

Sudden — whereat a suden pale V A 589 

Are on a sudden wasted " 749 

Suddenly — Be suddenly revenged R L 1683 

that vadeth suddenly P P 13 2 

Sue — sue for exiled majesty's repeal R L 641 

And sue a friend Son 134 11 

Suffer — suffer these abominations R L 1832 

O, let me suffer Son 58 5 

It suft'ers not in smiling pomp " 124 6 

pine within and suflfer dearth " 146 3 

Sufferance — patience, tame to . ... " 58 7 

Suffer'd—...., it will set the heart VA 388 

I suffer'd in your crime Son 120 8 

Suffering — Suffering my friend " 42 8 

her suffering ecstasy assuage L C 69 

Have of my suffering youth " 178 

in the suffering pangs it bears " 272 

Suffice— let it then suffice R L 1679 

to know thee shall suffice PP 5 7 

Sufficed — then is feelingly sufficed R L 1112 

in thy abundance am sufficed Son 37 11 

Sugar'd— Thy sugar'd tongue R L 893 



114 


6 


127 


11 


130 


G 


150 


7 




101 




322 


4 


4 


5 


14 


8 


7 



SUGGEST 



272 



SURFEIT 



RL 
VA 



RL 

Son 136 
LC 

PP 19 

Son 132 

" 127 

VA 



Son 



Suggest — two spirits do suggest me Son 144 
two spirits do suggest me still R JP 2 

Suggested — . . . . this proud issue 

Snggesteth— alarms, mutiny 

Suggestion — By their suggestion 

Suing — to his eyes suing 

SuitH-dwells upon my suit 
as desperate in his suit 
Tender my suit 

where his suit may be obtained 
my love-suit, sweet, fulfil 
A youthful suit, — it was 
Which late her noble suit 
And in thy suit be humble 

SjiU — And suit thy pity 

Suited — Her eyes so suited 

Suitor — suitor 'gins to woo him 

Sullen — Still is he sullen 
From sullen earth, sings 
the surly sullen bell " 

Sullied — your day of youth to sullied 
night " 

Sum — Shall sum my count " 

So great a sum of sums " 

hath cast his utmost sum " 

all thy sum of good " 

parcels in combined sums L C 

Summer — A summer's day will seem VA 
in summer's heat " 

ere summer half be done " 

perfection of my summer R L 

time leads summer on Son 

Summer's distillation left " 

In thee thy summer " 

And summer's green all girded " 
compare thee to a summer's day " 
And summer's lease " 

thy eternal summer " 

When summer's breath " 

Make summer's welcome " 

summer's hopey breath " 

summer of another's green " 

The summer's flower is to the sum- 
mer sweet " 
this time removed was summer's 

time " 

For summer and his pleasures " 

any summer's story tell " 

in summer's front doth sing " 

the summer is less pleasant " 

shook three summers' pride " 

was beauty's summer dead " 

Youth like summer morn 
Youth like summer brave 

Summon — Do summon us to part 
I summon up remembrance 

Sun — Even as the sun 
The sun doth burn my face 
of this descending sun 
The sun that shines 
between that sun and thee 
heavenly and earthly sun 
Like the fair sun 
sun glorifies the sky 
To shame the sun 
melts with the mid-day sun 
is tempest after sun 
The sun ariseth 
Nor sun nor wind 



2 

2 

37 

651 

1044 

356 

206 

336 

534 

898 

4 

79 

234 

32 

12 

10 

6 

75 

12 

2 

12 

11 
8 
3 

12 
231 

23 

91 
802 
837 
5 
9 
2 
7 
1 
4 
9 
8 

14 
5 

11 



PR 

VA 
Son 
VA 



94 

97 
97 
98 
102 
102 
104 
104 
12 
12 



5 

11 

7 

7 

9 

4 

14 

3 

4 

534 

2 

1 

186 

190 

193 

194 

198 

483 

485 

732 

750 

800 

856 

1082 



LC 
PR 



Sun — The sun doth scorn you V A 

sun and sharp air 

gaudy sun would peep ' 

golden splendour of the sun R 

fair and fiery-pointed sun 
permit the sun to climb 
when sun doth melt their snow 
Why her two suns 
the sun being set 
Of those fair suns 
By heaven's fair sun 
With sun and moon Son 

where-through the sun 
the marigold at the sun's eye 
stain both moon and sun 
Even so my sun one early morn 
Suns of the world may stain when 

heaven's sun staineth 

with that sun thine eye 

five hundred courses of the sun 

the sun is daily new and old 

are nothing like the sun 

not the morning sun of heaven 

The sun itself sees not 

fortified her visage from the sun 

Then, thou fair sun 

Scarce had the sun " 

The sun look'd on the world " 

shine sun to succour flowers " 

Sunder — seems to part in sunder R L 

Sundry — The sundry dangers " 

Sung — when he hath sung V A 

And sung by children R L 

sung the dolefull'st ditty P P 

Sunk — brave day sunk in hideous 

night Son 

Sunken — thine own deep-sunken eyes " 
Sunset — sunset fadeth in the west " 
Sunshine— comforteth like .... V A 
Superior — which their superiors 

want R L 

Supp'd — for I supp'd with sorrow P P 
Supper— after supper long he ques- 
tioned R L . 
Suppliant — the humble suppliant's 

friend " 

Supplicant — ^And .... their sighs L C . 
Supi)ly — No man will .... thy want P P 
Support— sturdy trees support me V A . 
Suppose — . . . . thou dost defend me R L . 

or your aftairs suppose Son 

Supposed — there's no death .... R L . 
or else some shame supposed " 

makes supposed terror true " . 

my unsounded self, supposed a fool " 
I by lacking have supposed dead Son 
Supposed as forfeit " 

Sweetly supposed them L C 

Supposing — supposing thou art true Son 
Suppress'd — slack'd, not suppress'd R L 
thus is simple truth supprest Son 

Supreme — Imperious supreme of all VA 
the supreme fair R L 

Surcease — If they surcease to be " 

Sure — in sure wards of trust Son 

O, sure I am, the wits " 

And to be sure " 

Surety-like — He learn'd but . . . . " 
Surfeit— Whereon they surfeit VA 



.... 1084 
.... 1085 
.... 1088 
.... 25 
.... 372 
.... 775 
.... 1218 
.... 1224 
.... 1226 

1280 

.... 1837 
21 6 



24 
25 
35 
33 

33 
49 
59 
76 
130 
132 
148 

3 
6 
6 
15 



11 
6 
3 
9 

14 
6 
6 

13 
1 
5 
12 
9 

10 
1 

11 

16 

388 

128 

1095 

525 

11 

2 

7 

6 

799 

42 
6 

122 



897 

276 

21 38 

152 

1684 

57 10 

133 

377 

455 

1819 

31 2 



107 



138 



4 
142^ 

1 
425 



996 

780 

1766 

48 4 
59 13 
131 9 
134 7 
544 



SURFEIT 



273 



SWEET 



Snrfeit^Do surfeit by the eye VA 602 

Surfeits, impostiiumes, grief " 743 

Love surfeits not " 803 

Is but to surfeit R L 139 

pine and surfeit day by day Son 75 13 

Surfeit-taking— So .... Tarquin B L 698 

Surly — hear the surly sullen bell Son 71 2 

Surmise — Tarquin answers with sur- 
mise R L 83 

By deep surmise " 1579 

on just proof surmise accumulate Son 117 10 

Surmount^n all worths surmount " 62 8 

Surpass — would surpass the life VA 289 

Surplice — Let the priest in surplice 

white P T 13 

Surprise — to surprise her heart V A 890 

doth so surprise " 1049 

that they may surprise R L 166 

Survey — he will not every hour .... Son 52 3 
my love's sweet face survey " 100 9 

Survive — thou dost survive V A 173 

the scandal will survive R L 204 

surcease to be that should survive " 1766 

If thou survive my well-contented 

day Son 32 1 

Or you survive when I in earth " 81 2 

Surviving — this surviving shame R L 223 

So thy surviving husband " 519 

Suspect — It shall suspect where is V A 1153 

Suspect I may, yet not Son 144 10 

Suspect I may, yet not P P 2 10 

Suspect — Her rash suspect VA 1010 

The ornament of beauty is suspect Son 70 3 
If some suspect of ill " 70 ' 13 

Suspectetli — Little suspecteth the 

false worshipper R L 86 

Suspicion — And bid suspicion VA 448 

From that suspicion R L 1321 

Sustain — and such griefs sustain " 139 

Sustaining — for grief of my .... " 1272 

long in sorrow's sharp sustaining " 1573 

SwalloAV — to swallow Venus' liking VA 248 

swallow up his sound advice R L 1409 

Swallow'd — whole is .... in confusion " 1159 

as a swallow'd bait Son 129 7 

Swallowing — but a . . , , grave VA 757 

A swallowing gulf RL 557 

Swain — with the blunt swains he goes " 1504 

known to us poor swains P P 18 45 

Swan — the snow-white swan desire RL 1011 

And now this pale swan " 1611 

Be the death-divining swan P T 15 

Swart - coniplexion'd — the swart- 

complexion'd night Son 28 11 

Sway — by limping sway disabled " 66 8 
my heart to sway " 150 2 
noble by the sway L C 108 

Sway'd — ' Thus he that overruled I 

oversway'd VA 109 

Sway'st — when thou gently sway'st Son 128 3 

Swear — immortal hand she swears V A 80 

Swear Nature's death " 744 

That one would swear R L 1393 

seems to pelt and swear " 1418 

swears he did her wrong " 1462 

And swear I found you " 1635 

came evidence to swear " 1650 

I swear it to myself alone Son 131 8 

that is not false I swear " 131 9 

18 



Swear— Then will I swear Son 132 13 

Swear to thy blind soul " 136 2 
swears that she is made of truth " 138 1 

And swear that brightness " 150 4 
swear against the thing they see " 152 12 

To swear against the truth " 152 14 

When my love swears P P 1 1 

how shall I swear to love "51 
Thou for whom Jove would swear " 17 15 

Swearing— Swearing I slew him R L 513 

Swearing unless I took all " 1641 

to me love swearing Son 152 2 
her oaths of true love swearing P P 1 8 

Sweat — queen began to sweat V A 175 

With pearly sweat R L 395 

Begrimed with sweat " 1381 

Sweating — on his sweating palm VA 25 

Since sweating Lust " 794 

sweating with guilty fear R L 740 

Sweet — sweet above compare VA 8 

And one sweet kiss " 84 

sweet boy, and may it be " 155 

Sweet bottom-grass " 236 

For one sweet look " 371 

approach of sweet desire " 386 

Ear's deep-sweet music " 432 

Pure lips, sweet seals " 511 

his neck a sweet embrace " 539 

that sweet coral mouth " 542 

' Sweet boy,' she says " 583 

' sweet boy, ere this " 613 

sweet lips and crystal eyne " 633 

from the sweet embrace " 811 

In the sweet channel " 958 

sweet Death, I did but jest " 997 

The flowers are sweet " 1079 

But true-sweet beauty lived " 1080 

Find sweet beginning " 1138 

Sweet issue of a more " 1178 

my sweet love's flower " 1188 

For one sweet grape R L 215 

with so sweet a cheer " 264 

that follows sweet delight " 357 

and enter this sweet city " 469 

and sweet friendship's oath " 569 

in her lips' sweet fold " 679 

of sweet chastity's decay " 80S 

where the sweet birds sing " 871 

mad with their sweet melody " 1108 

Who, having two sweet babes " 1161 

Such sweet observance " 1385 

And drop sweet balm " 1466 

Sweet love^ what spite " 1600 

In thy sweet semblance " 1759 

Then live, sweet Lucrece " 1770 

to thy sweet self too cruel Son 1 8 

thy sweet self dost deceive " 4 10 

substance still lives sweet " 5 14 

Make sweet some vial "63 

sweet husband to another "89 

And your sweet semblance " 13 4 
your sweet issue your sweet form 

should bear " 13 8 

drawn by your own sweet skill " 16 14 

her own sweet brood " 19 2 

worthy of thy sweet respect " 26 12 

For thy sweet love " 29 13 

of sweet silent thought " 30 1 

To that sweet thief " 35 14 



SWEET 



274 



TABLE 



Sweet— Yet doth it steal sweet hours Son 36 8 

Thine own sweet argument " 38 3 

sour leisure gave sweet leave " 89 10 

Sweet flattery ! then she loves " 42 14 

sweet up-locked treasure " 52 2 

By that sweet ornament " 54 2 

For that sweet odour " 54 4 

Sweet roses do not so " 54 11 

Of their sweet deaths " 54 12 

Sweet love, renew thy force " 56 1 

My sweet love's beauty " 63 11 

That I in your sweet thoughts " 71 7 

late the sweet birds sang " 73 4 

O, know, sweet love " 76 9 

with thy sweet graces graced be " 78 12 

I grant, sweet love " 79 5 

Thy sweet beloved name " 89 10 

in thy face, sweet love " 93 10 

If thy sweet virtue " 93 14 

is to the summer sweet " 94 9 

How sweet and lovely " 95 1 

nor the sweet smell " 98 5 

They were but sweet " 98 11 

my love's sweet face " 100 9 

So your sweet hue " 104 11 

blazon of sweet beauty's best " 106 5 

Nothing, sweet boy " 108 5 

The most sweet favour " 113 10 

your sweet self resemble " 114 6 

as thy sweet self grow'st " 126 4 

Sweet beauty hath no name " 127 7 

With thy sweet fingers " 128 3 

To thy sweet will making " 185 4 

my love-suit, sweet, fulfil " 136 4 

a something sweet to thee " 136 12 

that tongue that ever sweet " 145 6 

thy sweet self prove " 151 4 

What's sweet to do LC 88 

When winds breathe sweet " 103 

But, O my sweet " 239 

to my sweet design " 278 

Sweet Cytherea, sitting P P 4 1 

is music and sweet fire " 5 12 
If music and sweet poetry agree "81 

the sweet melodious sound "89 

did I see a fair sweet youth "99 

Sweet rose, fair flower " 10 1 

O, sweet shepherd, hie thee " 12 11 

Sweet birds sing not " 18 38 

Farewell, sweet lass " 18 49 

For a sweet content " 18 51 

^oeeC— With sweets that shall VA 1144 

The sweets we wish for R L 867 

Sweets with sweets war not Son 8 2 

Since sweets and beauties " 12 11 

all her fading sweets " 19 7 

O, in what sweets " 95 4 
Sweet thief, whence didst thou 

steal thy sweet " 99 2 

But sweet or colour " 99 15 

And sweets grown common " 102 12 

For compound sweet " 125 7 

To be forbod the sweets L C 164 

Youth, so apt to pluck a sweet P P 17 14 

Sweeten — sweetens in the suffering 

pangs L C 272 

Sweetest — canker lives in ... . bud Son 35 4 

are sweetest odours made " 54 12 

in heaven's sweetest air " 70 4 



Sweetest — canker vice the sweetest 

buds doth love Son 70 7 

For sweetest things turn sourest " 94 13 
my sweet'st friend must be " 133 4 

Sweetly — in darkness sweetly lay R L 398 

They do but sweetly chide thee Son 8 7 
so sweetly doth deceive " 39 12 

Sweetly supposed them L C 142 

sweetly did she smile P P 14 7 

Th' one sweetly flatters R L 172 

Sweetness — sweetness of the spoil V A 553 

nothing thence but sweetness Son 93 12 

your ne'er-cloying sweetness " 118 5 

Sweet-season'd — Or as ... . showers " 75 2 

Sweet-smelling— a more sire VA 1178 

Swell— Swell in their pride R L 432 

swells the higher by this let " 646 

Swelleth — swelleth with more rage V A 332 

Swelling — And swelling passion " 218 

swelling dugs do ache " 875 

Swelling on either side R L 389 

your hollow -swelling feather'd 

breasts " 1122 

with swelling drops 'gan wet " 1228 

With swelling ridges " 1439 

Swerving — my patent back again is 

swerving Son 87 8 

Swift— by whose swift aid VA 1190 

with swift intent he goes RL 46 

Swift subtle post, carrier " 926 

and how swift and short " 991 

Whose swift obedience " 1215 

With swift pursuit to venge " 1691 

with swift motion slide Son 45 4 

By those swift messengers " 45 10 

When swift extremity " 51 6 

can hold his swift foot back " 65 11 

and makes all swift despatch " 143 3 

Swiftest— The hours observed L C .... 60 

Swift-footed — whate'er thou wilt; 

swift-footed Time Son 19 6 

Swiftly— swiftly doth forsake him VA 321 

Swimmer— Like an unpractised RL 1098 

Swine — a churlish swine to gore V A 616 

the loving swine " 1115 

Swoln — All swoln with chafing " 325 

Swore— and that they swore R L 1848 

Sworn — When they had sworn " 1849 

For I have sworn thee fair Son 147 13 

For I have sworn deep oaths " 152 9 

For I have sworn thee fair " 152 13 

But, alas! my hand hath sworn PP 17 11 

That's to ye sworn L C 180 

Swound — Here Troilus swounds R L 1486 

and swound at tragic shows L C 808 

Swounding — Or swounding paleness " 305 

Sword — Draw not thy sword R L 626 

they would debate with angry 

swords " 1421 

against my heart he set his sword " 1640 

Nor Mars his sword Son 55 7 

Sympathized — with like semblance 

it is sympathized RL 1113 

Thou truly fair wert truly sympa- 
thized Son 82 11 

Sympatliy — This solemn sympathy V A 1057 

enforced by sympathy R L 1229 



Table — in table of my heart 



Son 24 



TABLE 



275 



TARQUIN 



Table — thy tables, are -within my 

brain Son 122 1 

To trust those tables " 122 12 

Ta'eii — Had ta'en his last leave VA 2 

is ta'en prisoner by the foe JR L 1608 

Tail— Thin mane, thick tail V A 298 

through his mane and tail " 305 

He vails his tail " 314 

Clapping their proud tails " 928 

Tainted — our hearts oft tainted be i2 i 38 

Which by him tainted " 1182 

weep upon the tainted place " 1746 

Take— Till he take truce V A 82 

goeth about to take him " 319 

snow takes any dint " 354 

now she takes him " 361 

To take advantage " 405 

she takes all she can " 564 

take counsel of their friends " 640 

and takes no rest " 647 

she takes him by the hand " 1124 

in this hollow cradle take thy rest " 1185 

takes the worser part 22 L 294 

He takes it from the rushes " 318 

He takes for accidental things " 326 

no device can take " 535 

take root with precious flowers " 870 

when death takes one " 1161 

husband, do thou take " 1200 

ihe other takes in hand " 1235 

At last he takes her ": 1597 

do not take away " 1796 

when he takes thee hence Son 12 14 

As he takes from you " 15 14 

Unless thou take that honour " 36 12 

decrepit father takes delight " 37 1 

Take all my comfort " 37 4 
Take all my loves, my love, yea, 

take them all " 40 1 

come and take my love " 64 12 

black night doth take away " 73 7 

To take a new acquaintance " 77 12 

your memory death cannot take " 81 3 

that thou mayst take " 91 13 

Take heed, dear heart " 95 13 

And take thou my oblation " 125 10 

thy beauty thou wilt take " 134 9 

take the worst to be " 137 4 

his metal from his rider takes L C 107 

hence a question takes " 110 

Take all these similes " 227 

and he takes and leaves " 305 

to take her figured proifer P P 4 10 

Her stand she takes "95 
And would not take her meaning " 11 12 

As take the pain " 14 12 

Take counsel of some wiser head " 19 5 

None takes pity on thy pain " 21 20 

Taken — Had ta'en his last leave VA 2 

is ta'en prisoner by the foe R L 1608 

although his height be taken Son 116 8 

have no leisure taken " 120 7 

thy cruel eye hath taken " 133 5 

Taker — to make the taker mad " 129 8 

Takest — breath thou givest and ...,PT 19 

Taking— Taking no notice VA 341 

but she, in worser taking R L 453 

So surfeit-taking Tarquin fares " 698 

Tale— she tunes her tale VA 74 



Tale — she trembles at his tale V A 591 

This carry-tale, dissentious Jealousy " 657 

in his ears a heavy tale " 1125 

and tell my loving tale R L 480 

object to the tell-tale Day " 806 

to purge my impure tale " 1078 

sad tales doth tell " 1496 

to list the sad-tuned tale LC 4 

How many tales to please me P P 1 9 

thou comest thy tale to tell " 19 7 

Talent — these talents of their hair L C 204 

Talk— 'What! canst thou talk VA 427 

To talk in deeds R L 1348 

Begins to talk ; but through " 1783 

Talk— to your wanton talk V A 809 

Mingling my talk with tears R L 797 

and too much talk affords " 1106 

thy tongue with filed talk PP 19 8 

Talk'd— And talk'd of virtue R L 846 

Tall— He of tall building Son 80 12 

Tally— Nor need I tallies " 122 10 

Tame — tame and gently hear him VA 1096 

And patience, tame to sufferance Son 58 7 

nature is both kind and tame L C 311 

Youth is wild and age is tame P P 12 8 

Tame — To tame the unicorn R L 956 

Continuance tames the one " 1097 

Tamed — tamed with too much V A 560 

Tan — Tan sacred beauty Son 115 7 

Tangled— tangled in a net VA 67 

Tann'd — chopp'd with tann'd an- 
tiquity Son 62 10 

Tantalus — worse than Tantalus' VA 599 

like still-pining Tantalus R L 858 

Tapster — Like shrill-tongued tap- 
sters VA 849 

Tarquin — leaves the Roman R L 3 

in Tarquin's tent •' 15 

Which Tarquin view'd " 72 

Enchanted Tarquin answers " 83 

For then is Tarquin " 120 

doth Tarquin lie revolving " 127 

now must doting Tarquin make " 155 

These worlds in Tarquin " 411 

doth Tarquin stay " 423 

' In Tarquin's likeness " 596 

So surfeit-taking Tarquin " 698 

' Were Tarquin Night " 785 

with Tarquin's name " 814 

reproach to Tarquin's shame " 816 

How Tarquin wronged me " 819 

And Tarquin's eye " 830 

When Tarquin did, but he " 917 

some mischance cross Tarquin " 968 

At Time, at Tarquin " 1024 

I fear'd by Tarquin's falchion " 1046 

hath Tarquin rifled me " 1050 

I'll hum on Tarquin still " 1133 

my stained blood to Tarquin " 1181 

How Tarquin must be used " 1195 

serve thou false Tarquin so " 1197 

' Tarquin from hence " 1276 

Tarquin gone away " 1281 

as knowing Tarquin's lust " 1354 

But Tarquin's shape " 1536 

To me came Tarquin armed " 1544 

So did I Tarquin " 1547 

She throws forth Tarquin's name " 1717 

and that false Tarquin stain'd " 1743 



TARQUIN 



276 



TELL 



Tarquiii — sometime ' Tarquin ' was 

pronounced plain R L 1786 

to publish Tarquin's foul offence " 1852 

Tarquin's everlasting banishment " 1855 

Tarriaiice — longing .... for Adonis P P 6 4 

Task— His day's hot task VA 530 

In that high task R L 80 

the task it hath to say " 1018 

her sad task hath not said " 1699 

should task you to recite Son 72 1 

.Taste — Dainties to taste VA 164 

is sour to taste " 528 

this learning mayst thou taste Son 77 4 

so shall I taste " 90 11 

that needs will taste L C 167 

Taste — wert thou to the taste V A 445 

Whose precious taste " 543 

hut alter not his taste R L 651 

His taste delicious " 699 

to bitter wormwood taste " 893 

The stained taste of violated, troth " 1059 

By wilful taste of what thyself Son 40 8 

Nor taste, nor smell " 141 7 

Tasted — mayst thou well be tasted VA 128 

Tatter'd— Will be a tatter'd weed San 2 4. 

on my tatter'd loving " 26 11 

Tauffht — .... them scornful tricks VA 501 

Thoseeyesthattaughtallother eyes " 952 

Ruin hath taught me Son 64 11 

taught the dumb on high " 78 5 

by spirits taught to write " 86 5 

love taught it this alchemy " 114 4 

And taught it thus anew " 145 8 

Who taught thee how " 150 9 

hath taught her thus to say P P 19 22 

Taught'st— that thou this ill R L 996 

Teach — his proceedings teach thee V A 406 

doth teach it divination " 670 

teach the fool to speak " ..... 1146 

and thou didst teach the way R L 6.30 

Teach me to curse him " 996 

O, teach me how to make " 1653 

To teach my tongue Son 19 52 

Doth teach that ease " 50 3 

I teach thee how " 101 13 

If I might teach thee wit " 140 5 

Tcacliest — And that thou teachest " 89 13 

Teaching— Teaching the sheets VA 398 

Teaching decrepit age " 1148 

Teaching them thus to use it R L 62 

Team — had his team to guide V A 179 

Tear — she with her tears " 49 

with her contending tears " 82 

quench them with my tears " 192 

AVith tears, which chorus-like " 360 

your feigned tears " 425 

the crystal tears gave light " 491 

Dost thou drink tears " 949 

O, how her eyes and tears " 961 

seen in the tears, tears in her eye " 962 

tears make them wet again " 966 

Whereat her tears began " 979 

With purple tears, that his wound 

wept " 1054 

my salt tears gone " 1071 

first should dry his tears " 1092 

which she compares to tears " 1176 

Nor children's tears R L 431 

tears ensue the deed " 502 



Tear— Tears harden lust R L 560 

By her untimely tears " 570 

Be moved with my tears " 588 

Melt at my tears " 594 

In the chastest tears " 682 

Her tears should drop " 686 

Mingling my talk with tears " 797 

when time is kept with tears " 1127 

at each sad strain will strain a tear " 1131 

Those tears from thee " 1271 

If tears could help " 1274 

and tears may grace " 1319 

seem'd a weeping tear " 1375 

And with my tears quench Troy " 1468 

To see those borrow'd tears " 1549 

For every tear he falls " 1551 

false Sinon's tears doth flatter " 1560 

Her eyes, though sod in tears " 1592 

carved in it with tears " 1713 

To check the tears " 1817 

a holy and obsequious tear Son 31 5 

Ah ! but those tears are pearl " 34 13 
heavy tears, badges of cither's woe " 44 14 
potions have I drunk of Siren tears " 119 1 

with watching and with tears " 148 10 

with tears thou keep'st me blind " 148 13 

woe had pelleted in tears L C 18 

orb of one particular tear " 289 

resolved my reason into tears " 296 

Her faith, her oaths, her tears P P 7 ^1 

Scarce I could from tears refrain " 21 16 

Tear- shall rudely tear thee R L 669 

her nails her flesh doth tear " 739 

to tear his curled hair " 981 

her beauty I may tear " 1472 

She tears the senseless Sinon " 1564 

and often 'gan to tear L C 51 

Tear-distained — about her .... eye R L 1586 

Tearing — Tearing of papers, break- 
ing rings L C 6 

Tedious — Her song was tedious VA 841 

My woes are tedious R L 1309 

burnt out in tedious nights " 1379 

Teeming — The teeming autumn Son 97 6 

Teen — my heart of teen V A 808 

put to the smallest teen L C 192 

Teeth— 'tween his teeth VA 269 

whet his teeth at him " 1113 

But through his teeth R L 1787 

Pluck the keen teeth Son 19 3 

Tell — Tell me, love's master VA 585 

He tells her, no ; to-morrow " 587 

More I could tell " 805 

She tells them 'tis " 897 

Tells him of trophies " 1013 

Do tell her she is dreadfully beset P L 444 

and tell my loving tale " 480 

marking what he tells " 510 

will tell my story " 813 

But tell me, girl, when went " 1275 

than one hath power to tell " 1288 

sad tales doth tell " 1496 

And tell thy grief " 1603 

To tell them all " 1617 

and tell the face thou viewest Son 3 1 
count the clock that tells the time " 12 1 

But not to tell of good " 14 3 

fortune to brief minutes tell " 14 5 

I tell the day to please him " 28 9 



TELL 



277 



THAN 



Tell — from woe to woe tell o'er Son 30 10 

doth almost tell my name " 76 7 

if he can tell " 84 7 

of our old acquaintance tell " 89 12 
nothing thence but sweetness tell " 93 12 

That tongue that tells " 95 5 

any summer's story tell " 98 7 

and your gifts to tell " 103 12 

Tell me thou lovest elsewhere " 139 5 

yet, love, to tell me so " 140 6 

yet not directly tell " 144 10 

My soul doth tell my body " 151 7 

Let it not tell your judgement L C 73 

you are, O, hear me tell " 253 

yet not directly tell PP 2 10 

thou comest thy tale to tell " 19 7 

Telliiiar— still telling what is told Son 76 14 

by thy true-telling friend " 82 12 

Tell-tale— object to the tell-tale Day iJi 806 

Temperiince — when is thaw'd " 884 

Temperate — lovely and more . . , . Son 18 2 
Temper'd — Strong - temper'd steel 

his stronger strength obey'd VA Ill 

Tempering' — dissolves with tempering" 565 

Tempest — from .... and from rain " 238 

tempest to the field " 454 

tempest after sun " 800 

This windy tempest JR L 1788 

That looks on tempests Son 116 6 

Temple — his soul's fair temple R L 719 

Her sacred temple spotted " 1172 

Tempt — uproar tempts his veins " 427 

And now, to tempt all L C 252 

Temptation — For still .... follows Son 41 4 

and to temptation slow " 94 4 

Tempted— Not to be tempted L C 251 

Tempter — gave the tempter place " 818 

Temptetli — Tempteth my better 

angel Son 144 6 

Tempteth my better angel P P 2 6 

Tempting — Upon thy tempting lip VA 127 

the tempting tune is blown " 778 

tempting her to thee Son 41 13 

Ten — Ten kisses short as one VA 22 

What is ten hundred " 519 

without ten women's wit " 1008 

He ten times pines R L 1115 

Or ten times happier be it ten for 

one Son 6 8 

Ten times thyself "69 

If ten of thine ten times " 6 10 

then ten times happy me " 37 14 

ten times more in worth " 38 9 

Tenant — tenants to their shame R L 1260 

all tenants to the heart Son 46 10 

Tend — strange shadows on you tend " 53 2 

What should I do but tend " 57 1 

to no other pass my verses tend " 103 11 

his invised properties did tend L C 212 

Tender — was the tender boy VA 32 

The tender spring " 127 

broad buttock, tender hide " 298 

Her other tender hand " 352 

eats up Love's tender spring " 656 

do the tender leaves " 798 

whose tender horns being hit " 1033 

in pity of his tender years " 1091 

Unapt for tender smell R L 695 

wait on the tender spring " 869 



lender — His tender heir might be£ 


\.x Son 


1 4 


And, tender churl 




1 12 


As tender nurse 




22 12 


In tender embassy of love 




45 6 


To kiss the tender inward 




128 6 


Nor tender feeling 




141 6 


The tender nibbler 


PP 


4 11 


Tender — Tender my suit 


EL 


534 


The barren tender 


Son 


83 4 


Of pensived and subdued desires 




the tender 


LC 


219 


Tender'd— fee of parting is 


VA 


538 


as you to me then tender'd 


Son 


120 11 


Tenderer— His tenderer cheek 


VA 


353 


Tenour — the tenour of her woe 


RL 


.... 1310 


The scope and tenour 


Son 


61 8 


Tent — his tent my bed 


VA 


108 


the night before in Tarquin's tent R L 


15 


Tenth — Be thou the tenth Muse 


Son 


38 9 


Tereu— ' Tereu, Tereu !' by and by 


PP 


21 14 


Tereus— While thou on Tereus 


RL 


1134 


Term — May any terms acquit me 


" 


1706 


For term of life 


Son 


92 2 


Buy terms divine 


" 


146 11 


And long upon these terms 


LC 


176 


Tcriii'd — be term'd a poet's rage 


Son 


17 11 


Termless— on that termless skin 


LC 


94 


Teri'or — Which with cold terror 


VA 


1048 


with trembling terror die 


RL 


231 


What terror 'tis 


" 


452 


makes supposed terror true 


" 


.... 455 


Eftects of terror 


LC 


202 


Testament — writ in my testament 


RL 


1183 


Testy— His testy master 


VA 


319 


fond and testy as a child 


RL 


.... 1094 


As testy sick men 


Son 140 7 


Text— The text is old 


VA 


806 


Th.an — ' Thrice fairer than myself 


•' 


7 


more lovely than a man 


" 


9 


than doves or roses are 


" 


.... 10 


than she for this good turn 


" 


.... 92 


Nay, more than flint 


" 


.... 200 


a whiter hue than white 


" 


.... 398 


That worse than Tantalus 


« 


.... 599 


than thy spear's point 


" 


.... 626 


And more than so 


" 


.... 661 


than civil home-bred strife 


" . 


.... 764 


more moving than your own 


" 


.... 776 


Her more than haste 


" . 


... 909 


Rather than triumph 


RL 


.... 77 


More than his eyes 


" . 


... 105 


more slavish tribute than they owe " 


.... 299 


With more than admiration 




... 418 


Worse than a slavish wipe 




... 537 


no harder than a stone 




... 593 


a dearer thing than life 




... 687 


far poorer than before 




... 693 


deeper sin than bottomless conceit " . 


... 701 


hearts, harder than stones 


" . 


... 978 


Wilder to him than tigers , 


" . 


... 980 


Than they whose whole 


" . 


... 1159 


No more than wax 


" . 


.... 1245 


than I can well express 


" . 


... 1286 


than one hath power to tell 


" . 


... 1288 


more than hear them told 


" . 


... 1324 


lesser noise than shallow fords 


" . 


... 1329 


with more than haste 


" . 


... 1332 


Speed more than speed 


" . 


... 13.36 


In me moe words than woes 


" . 


... 1615 



THAN 



278 



THAT 



Than — But more than he R L 1718 

happier than thou art Son 6 9 

fairer lodged tliau gentle love " 10 10 

than you yourself here live " 13 2 

more blessed than my barren rhyme" 16 4 

than your painted counterfeit " 16 8 

of less truth than tongue " 17 10 

eye more bright than theirs " 20 5 

be elder than thou art " 22 8 

More than that tongue " 23 12 

A dearer birth than this " 32 11 

more than thy shis are " 35 8 

Than those old nine " 38 10 

more than thou hadst before " 40 2 

than hate's known injury " 46 12 

not farther than my thoughts " 47 11 

than spurring to his side " 50 12 

Than unswept stone " 55 4 

should blunter be than appetite " 56 2 

is no stronger than a flower " 65 4 

than the eye hath shown " 69 8 

Than you shall hear " 71 2 

than mine own desert " 72 6 

than niggard truth " 72 8 

Tlian both your poets " 83 14 

Than this rich praise " 84 2 

than liigh birth to me " 91 9 
Richer than wealth, prouder than 

garments' cost " 91 10 

more delight than hawks or horses " 91 11 

than thy love will stay " 92 3 

Than that which on thy humour " 92 8 

smell far worse than weeds " 94 14 

faster than Time wastes life " 100 13 

Than when her mournful hymns " 102 10 

Than when it hath " 103 4 

Than of your graces " 103 12 

than in my verse can sit " 103 13 

Than public means " 111 4 

Grows fairer than at first " 119 12 

more than I have spent " 119 14 

to be vile than vile esteemed " 121 1 
Than think that we before have 

heard " 123 8 

more sliort than waste or ruining " 124 4 

more blest than living lips " 128 12 

more red than her lips' red " 130 2 

Than in tlie breath " 130 8 

more than enough am I " 135 3 

more than o'er-press'd defence " 139 8 

Than the true gouty landlord L C 140 

Brighter than glass P P 1 3 
Softer than wax "74 
Paler for sorrow than her milk- 
white dove "93 
witli more than love's good will "97 
he saw more wounds than one " 9 13 
more than I did crave " 10 9 
Blore in women than in men " 18 IS 

Than — To break upon the galled 

shore and than R L 1440 

Thank— 0, give thyself the thanks Son 38 5 

Then thank him not " 79 13 

That— Nature that made thee, with FjI 11 

Saith that the world hath ending " 12 

a river that is rank " 71 

And begg'd for that which thou 

unask'd shalt have " 102 

he that overruled I oversway'd " 109 



That — mastering her that foil'd the 

god of fight VA 114 

flowers that are not gather'd " 131 

That thou shouldst think it heavy " 155 

That thine may live when thou " 172 

In that thy likeness still is left " 174 

The sun that shines from heaven " 193 

I lie between that sun and thee " 194 

the fire that burneth me " 196 

'What am I, that thou shouldst 

contemn me this " 205 

That in each cheek appears a pretty 

dimple " 242 

To love a cheek that smiles at thee " 252 

a copse that neighbours by " 259 

Ofthefairbreederthatisstandingby" 282 

his tail, that, like a falling plume " 314 

crows that strive to overfly them " 324 

That love-sick Love by pleading 

maybe blest " 328 

An oven that is stopp'd " 331 

Taking no notice that she is so nigh " 341 

doves that sit a-billing " 366 

a coal that must be cool'd " 387 

Who is so faint, that dares not be 

so bold " 401 

That laughs and weeps, and all " 414 

The colt that's back'd " 419 

That inward beauty and invisible " 434 

Each part in me that were but sen- 
sible " 435 

That the sense of feeling were be- 
reft me " 439 

And that I could not see, nor hear " 440 

breath perfumed that breedeth love 

by smelling " 444 

Jealousy, that sour unwelcome guest" 449 

a red morn that ever yet betoken'd " 453 

bankrupt that by love so thriveth " 466 

the wit that can so well defend her " 472 

thehurtthathisunkindnessmarr'd " 478 

Thy eyes' shrewd tutor, that hard 

heart of thine " 500 

That they have murder'd this poor 

heart " 502 

That the star-gazers, having writ " 509 

Say, for non-payment that the debt 

should double " 521 

clouds that shadow heaven's light " 533 

The heavenly moisture, that sweet 

coral mouth " 542 

That she will draw his lips' rich 

treasure dry " 552 

roe that's tired with chasing " 561 

prays her that he may depart " 578 

That worse than Tantalus' is her 

annoy " 599 

birds that helpless berries saw " 604 

But that thou told'st me thou wouldst" 614 

pikes that ever threat his foes " 620 

esteems that face of thine " 631 

They that thrive well " 640 

This canker that eats up " 656 

That sometime true news, some- 
time false doth bring " 658 

That if I love thee, I thy death " 660 

That tremble at the imagination " 668 

To one sore-sick that hears the 
passing-bell " 702 



THAT 



279 



THAT 



That — Applying this to that, and so 

to so VA 713 

'Why, what of that?' quoth she " 717 

For stealing moulds from heaven 

that weje divine " 730 

That on the earth would breed " 753 

lamp that burns by night " 755 

to bury that posterity " 758 

Or butcher-sire that reaves his son 

of life " 76G 

gold that's put to use " 768 

' What have you urged that I can- 
not reprove " 787 

The path is smooth that leadeth 

on to danger " 788 

That lends embracements unto 

every stranger " 790 

Mine ears, that to your wanton talk " 809 

the object that did feed her sight " 822 

as one that unaware " 823 

Til at all the neighbour caves " 830 

That cedar-tops and hills seem " 858 

influence that makes him bright " 8R2 

a son that suck'd an earthly mother " 863 

like one that spies an adder " 878 

And childish error, that they are 

afraid " 898 

And with that word " 900 

the path that she untreads again " 908 

Mistakes that aim, and cleaves " 942 

' Dost thou drink tears, that thou 

provokest " 949 

Those eyes that taught " 952 

tide that from her two cheeks " 957 

Sorrow that friendly sighs sought " 964 

That every present sorrow seemeth " 970 

web that she hath wrought " 991 

It was not she that call'd " 993 

the boar, that bloody beast " 999 

creature, that hath done thee wrong " 1005 

hoping that Adonis is alive " 1009 

And that his beauty may the bet- 
ter thrive " 1011 

Whereat she leaps that was but 

late forlorn " 1026 

That from their dark beds once 

more leap " 1050 

wound that the boar had trench'd " 1052 

tears, that his wound wept " 1054 

Her eyes are mad that they have 

wept " 1062 

That her sight dazzling makes the 

wound " 1064 

That makes more gashes " 1066 

What face remains alive that's 

worth the viewing " 1076 

the silly lamb that day " 1098 

That some would sing " 1102 

livery that he wore " 1107 

entertainment that he gave " 1108 

She takes him by the hand, and 

that is cold " 1124 

coffer-lids that close " 1127 

That, thou being dead, the day 

should yet be light " 1134 

That all love's pleasure shall not 

match " 1140 

With sweets that shall the truest 

sight beguile " 1144 



That— they that love best VA 1164 

the boy that by her side lay kill'd " 1165 

blood, that on the ground lay spill'd " 1167 

Haply that name of ' chaste ' R L 8 

Which triumph'd in that sky " 12 

That kings might be espoused " 20 

To set forth that which is so sin- 
gular " 32 

Of that rich jewel " 34 

Perchance that envy " 39 

that meaner men should vaunt " 41 

That golden hap which " 42 

Virtue would stain that o'er " 56 

beauty, in that white intituled " 57 

challenge that fair field " 58 

That oft they interchange " 70 

armies, that would let him go " 76 

Now thinks he that her husband's " 78 

prodigal that praised her so " 79 

In that high task hath done " 80 

Therefore that praise which " 82 

For that he colour'd with his high 

estate " 92 

That nothing in him seem'd " 94 

That, cloy'd with much, he pineth " 98 

But she, that never coped " 99 

troubled minds that wake " 126 

Those that much covet " 134 

That what they have not, that 

which they possess " 135 

That they prove bankrupt " 140 

That one for all " 144 

oft that wealth doth cost " 146 

So that in venturing ill " 148 

The things we are for that which 

we expect " 149 

Of that we have " 152 

Now serves the season that they 

may surprise ~ " 166 

That from the cold stone " .... 177 

that which is divine " 193 

That spots and stains " 196 

That it will live engraven " 203 

That my posterity " 208 

To wish that I their father " 210 

This siege that hath engii-t " 221 

That which is vile '• 252 

roses that on lawn we lay " 258 

That had Narcissus seen her " 265 

the heart that shadows dreadeth " 270 

That now he vows a league " 287 

That eye which looks " 290 

That eye which him beholds " 291 

wind that fires the torch " 315 

The doors, the wind, the glove 

that did delay him " 325 

Like little frosts that sometime " 331 

That shuts him from the heaven " 338 

That for his prey " 342 

That his foul thoughts " 346 

the shame that follows sweet de- 
light " 357 

The dove sleeps fast that this 

night-owl will catch " 360 

draw the cloud that hides " 371 

Whether it is that she reflects so 

bright " 376 

That dazzleth them " 377 

in that darksome prison died " 379 



THAT 



280 



THAT 



That— But that life lived in death B L 406 

What he beheld, on that he firmly 

- doted " 416 

That thinks she hath beheld " 451 

Who, angry that the eyes " 461 

His hand, that yet remains " 463 

her bulk that his hand shakes 

withal " 467 

That even for anger makes " 478 

Under that colour " 481 

My will that marks thee " ••••• 487 

That done, some worthless slave " 515 

The shame that from them " 535 

The blemish that will never he 

forgot " 536 

beast that knows no gentle right " 545 

gulf that even in plenty " 557 

That twice she doth begin " 567 

That to his borrow'd bed " 573 

Mud not the fountain that gave 

drink " 577 

the thing that cannot be amended " 578 

woodman that doth bend his bow " 580 

by him that gave it thee " 624 

ail that brood to kill " 627 

That from their own misdeeds " 637 

That thou shalt see thy state " 644 

streams that pay a daily debt " 649 

That done, despitefuUy I mean " 670 

linen that she wears " 680 

That ever modest eyes " 683 

O, that prone lust should stain " 684 

his will, that lived by foul devour- 
ing " 700 

and when that decays " 713 

That through the length " 718 

victor that hath lost in gain " 730 

the wound that nothing healeth " 731 

The scar that will, despite of cure, 

remain " 732 

but that every eye " 750 

like water that doth eat in steel " 755 

That in their smoky ranks " 783 

Day behold that face " 800 

That all the faults which " 804 

the illiterate, that know not how " 810 

good name, that senseless reputa- 
tion " 820 

If that be made a theme " 822 

That is as clear " 825 

he that gives them " 833 

That some impurity doth " 854 

aged man that coft'ers up his gold " 855 

tormeut that it cannot cure " 861 

in the moment that " 868 

no good that we can say " 873 

thou that executest " 877 

'Tis thou that spurn'st " 880 

souls that wander " 882 

free that soul which " 900 

incest, that abomination " 921 

all that are to come " 923 

■ murder'st all that are " 929 

the tiger that doth live " 955 

Lending him wit that to bad 

debtors lends " 964 

see one that by alms doth live " 98G 

curse him that thou taught'st this ill " 996 

That makes him honour'd " 1005 



That— Since that my case R L 1022 

smoke from ^tna that in air con- 
sumes " 1042 

Or that which from discharged 

cannon fumes " 1043 

that cannot be " 1049 

Of that true type " 1050 

O, that is gone " 1051 

That thou art doting father " 1064 

mountain-spring that feeds a dale " 1077 

eyes that light will borrow " 1083 

eyes that are sleeping " 1090 

little birds that tune " 1107 

He ten times pines that pines be- 
holding food " 1115 

grief grieves most at that would " 1117 

Philomel, that sing'st of ravish- 
ment " 1128 

That knows not parching heat " 1145 

deer, that stands at gaze " 1149 

That cannot tread the way " 1152 

They that lose half " 1158 

That mother tries " 1160 

That he may vow, in that sad hour " 1179 

Eevenge on him that made me " 1180 

That wounds my body " 1185 

'Dear lord of that dear jewel " 1191 

Mine honour be the knife's that 

makes my wound " 1201 

My shame be his that did my fame " 1202 

my fame that lives " 1208 

To those that live " 1204 

How was I overseen that thou 

Shalt see it " 1206 

little worms that creep " 1248 

that obscurely sleep " 1250 

winter that the flower hath kill'd " 1255 

not that devour'd, but that which 

doth devour " 1256 

Poor women's faults, that they are 

so fulfill'd " 1258 

shame that might ensue " 1263 

By that her death " 1264 

That dying fear " 1266 

Those tears from thee, that down 

thy cheeks " 1271 

And that deep torture " 1287 

Yet save that labour " 1290 

Of that unworthy wife that greet- 

eth thee " 1304 

From that suspicion which " 1321 

motion that it doth behold " 1326 

a part of sorrow that we hear " 1328 

That two red fires " 1353 

That she her plaints " 1364 

That one might see " 1386 

That one would swear " 1393 

glance that sly Ulysses lent " 1399 

That it beguiled attention " 1404 

That for Achilles' image " 1424 

That through their light joy " 1434 

the spring that those shrunk pipes " 1455 

Pyrrhus that hath done him wrong " 1467 

quench Troy that burns so long " 1468 

Greeks that are thine enemies " 1470 

strumpet that began this stir " 1471 

That with my nails " 1472 

load of wrath that burning Troy " 1474 

the fire that burneth here " 1475 



THAT 



281 



THAT 



That. — his head that hath trans- 
gressed so R L 1481 

That piteous looks to Phrygian 

shepherds lent " 1502 

So mild that Patience seem'd to 

scorn " 1505 

A brow unbent, that seem'd to 

welcome " 1509 

That blushing red no guilty in- 
stance gave " 1511 

the fear that false hearts have " 1512 

That jealousy itself could not " 1516 

Of rich-built Ilion, that the skies 

were " 1524 

That she concludes the picture was 

belied " 1533 

' It cannot be,' quoth she, ' that so 

much guile " 1534 

she in that sense forsook " 1538 

those borrow'd tears that Sinon 

sheds " 1549 

clear pearls of his that move thy 

pity " 1553 

And in that cold hot-burning fire 

doth dwell " 1557 

That he finds means to burn " 1561 

That patience is quite beaten " 1563 

Comparing him to that unhappy 

guest " 1565 

And they that watch see time " 1575 

That she with painted images " 1577 

Hath thee befall'n, that thou dost " 1599 

tell thy grief, that we may give 

redress " 1603 

A stranger came, and on that pil- 
low lay " ...;. 1620 

From that, alas, thy Lucrece is not " 1624 

That my poor beauty had purloin'd " 1651 

That was not forced ; that never was " 1657 

The grief away that stops his an- 
swer so " 1664 

the eye that doth behold his haste " 1668 

the strait that forced him on " 1670 

For she that was thy Lucrece " 1682 

the help that thou shalt lend me " 1685 

Speaking to those tliat came with " 1689 

But she, that yet her sad task " 1699 

The face, that map which deep " 1712 

That guides this hand to give " 1722 

knife, that thence her soul un- 
sheathed " 1724 

That blow did bail it " 1725 

Of that polluted prison where " 1726 

Lucrece' father, that beholds her 

bleed " 1732 

rivers, that the crimson blood " 1738 

some look'd black, and that false 

Tarquin " 1743 

Of that black blood a watery rigol " 1745 

Blushing at that which is " 1750 

' That life was mine " 1752 

But now that fair fresh mirror " 1760 

That I no more can see what once " 1764 

If they surcease to be that should 

survive " 1766 

Who, mad that sorrow should his 

use " 1781 

That no man could distinguish " 1785 

' I did give that life " 1800 



That— 'tis mine that she hath kill'd R L 1803 

he throws that shallow habit by " 1814 

To slay herself, that should have 

slain " 1827 

That they will suffer these " 1832 

by the Capitol that we adore " 1835 

By heaven's fair sun that breeds " 1837 

Lucrece' soul that late complained " 1839 

And that deep vow, which Brutus 

made " 1847 

again repeat, and that they swore " 1848 

That thereby beauty's rose Son 1 2 

Thou that art now "19 

the time that face should form an- 
other "32 
hours that with gentle work "51 
And that unfair which " 5 4 
That use is not forbidden "65 
Which happies those that pay the 

willing loan " 6 6 

That's for thyself "67 

Why lovest thou that which ' "83 

the parts that thou shouldst bear "88 
That thou consumest thyself "92 

That thou no form "96 

in that bosom sits " 9 13 

That on himself such murderous 

shame " 9 14 

deny that thou bear'st love to any " 10 1 
But that thou none lovest " 10 4 

That 'gainst thyself thou stick'st 

not to conspire " 10 6 

Seeking that beauteous roof to 

ruinate " 10 7 

that I may change my mind " 10 9 

That beauty still may live " 10 14 

from that which thou departest " 11 2 
And that fresh blood which " 11 3 

not let that copy die " 11 14 

clock that tells the time " 12 1 

That thou among the wastes ■" 12 10 

that you were yourself " 13 I 

So should that beauty which " 13 5 

By oft predict that I in heaven find " 14 8 
every thing that grows " 15 1 

That this huge stage " 15 3 

perceive that men as plants in- 
crease " 15 5 
the lines of life that life repair " 16 9 
child of yours alive that time " 17 13 
possession of that fair thou owest " 18 10 
as with that Muse " 21 1 
That heaven's air " 21 8 
Let them say more that like of 

hearsay well " 21 13 

I will not praise that purpose not 

to sell " 21 14 

For all that beauty that doth 

cover thee " 22 5 

More than that tongue that more " 23 12 
That hath his windows " 24 8 

joy in that I honour most " 25 4 

I, that love and am beloved " 25 13 

But that I hope " 26 7 

star that guides my moving " 26 9 

Save that my soul's imaginary sight " 27 9 
That am debarr'd " 28 2 

and that man's scope " 29 7 

That then I scorn to change " 29 14 



THAT 



282 



THAT 



That — things removed that hidden 
in thee lie Son 

That due of many now is " 

When that churl Death " 
'Tis not enough that through the 

cloud " 

That heals the wound " 

To him that bears " 
grieved at that which thou hast 

done " 

That I am accessary " 

To that sweet thief " 

confess that we two must be twain " 

blots that do with me remain " 

take that honour from thy name " 

Whilst that this shadow " 

That I in thy abundance am " 

what is best that best I wish in thee " 
thou dost breathe, that pour'st 

into my verse " 
For who's so dumb that cannot 

write to thee " 

And he that calls on thee " 

That by this separation I may " 

That due to thee which " 

And that thou teachest how " 
No love, my love, that thou mayst 

true love call " 

wrongs that liberty commits " 

That thou hast her, it is " 

That she hath thee, is " 
A loss in love that touches me 

more nearly " 

hath found that loss " 
thought kills me, that I am not 

thought " 

But that, so much of earth " 

the freedom of that right " 

plead that thou in him " 

doth that plea deny " 

When that mine eye is " 

That to my use it might " 
Against that time, if ever that 

time come " 
Call'd to that audit " 
Against that time when " 
greet me with that sun " 
Against that time do I " 
Doth teach that ease and that re- 
pose to say " 
The beast that bears me " 
bear that weight in me " 
That sometimes anger thrusts " 
For that same groan doth " 
is the time that keeps you " 
That millions of strange shadows " 
By that sweet ornament " 
For that sweet odour " 
When that shall vade " 
That wear this world out " 
the judgement that yourself arise " 
to the banks, that, when they see " 
is love that in your will " 
That god forbid that made me first 

your slave " 

That you yourself may privilege " 

nothing new but that which is " 

O, that record could with " 

That I might see what " 



31 


8 


81 


12 


32 


2 


34 


5 


34 


8 


34 


12 


35 


1 


35 


13 


35 


14 


36 


1 


36 


3 


36 


12 


37 


10 


37 


11 


37 


13 


38 


2 


38 


7 


38 


11 


39 


7 


39 


8 


39 


13 


40 


3 


41 


1 


42 


1 


42 


3 



42 


4 


42 


10 


44 


9 


44 


n 


46 


4 


46 


5 


46 


7 


47 


3 


48 


3 


49 


1 


49 


4 


49 


5 


49 


6 


49 


9 


50 


3 


50 


5 


50 


6 


50 


10 


50 


13 


52 


9 


53 


2 


54 


2 


54 


4 


54 


14 


55 


12 


55 


13 


5G 


11 


57 


13 


58 


1 


58 


10 


59 


1 


59 


5 


59 


9 



That — Each changing place with 

that which goes before Son 

And Time that gave " 
thy spirit that thou send'st from 

thee " 

It is my love that keeps mine eye " 

love that doth my rest " 
'Tis thee, myself, that for myself 

I praise " 

That he shall never cut " 

That time will come " 
weep to have that which it fears 

to lose " 

That in black ink my love " 

Save that, to die I leave " 

That sin by him advantage " 
Those parts of thee that the 

world's eye doth view " 
Want nothing that the thought of 

hearts " 

give thee that due " 
tongues, that give thee so thine own " 
And that, in guess. they measure 

by thy deeds " 
The soil -is this, that thou dost 

common grow " 

That thou art blamed shall not " 

A crow that flies " 
Give warning to the world that I 

am fled " 

The hand that writ it " 

That I in your sweet thoughts " 
What merit lived in me, that you 

should love " 

That you for love speak well " 

by that which I bring forth " 

That time of year thou mayst " 
Death's second self, that seals up 

all in rest " 

That on the ashes " 
consumed with that which it was 

nourish'd by " 

To love that well which " 

when that fell arrest " 

The worth of that is that which it " 

And that is this, and this " 

Then better'd that the world " 

That every word doth " 

Thine eyes that taught thee dumb " 

proud of that which I compile " 

and he stole that word " 
thank him not for that which he 

doth say " 

saw that you did jjainting need " 

That you yourself, being extant " 

Who is it that says most " 
Than this rich praise, that you 

alone are you " 

within that pen doth dwell " 

That to his subject lends " 

But he that writes of you " 

That you are you " 
To every hymn that able spirit 

aflbrds " 

But that is in my thought " 

That did my ripe thoughts " 

mortal pitch, that str\jck me dead " 

He, nor that affable familiar ghost " 

that enfeebled mine " 



GO 


8 


61 


5 


61 


10 


61, 


11 


62 


13 


63 


11 


64 


12 


64 


14 


65 


14 


66 


14 


67 


3 



69 


2 


69 


3 


69 


6 



69 


14 


70 


1 


70 


4 


71 


3 


71 


6 


71 


7 


72 


2 


72 


10 


72 


13 


73 


1 


73 


8 


73 


10 


73 


12 


73 


14 


74 


1 


74 


13 


74 


14 


75 


8 


76 


7 


78 


5 


78 


9 


79 


9 


79 


13 


83 


1 


83 


6 


84 


1 


84 


2 


84 


5 


84 


6 


84 


7 


84 


8 


85 


7 


85 


11 


86 


3 


86 


6 


86 


9 


86 


14 



THAT 



283 



THAT 



That— And for that riches where ia 
my deserving Son 

That thou in losing me " 

Tlie injuries that to myself I do " 

That for thy right myself will bear " 

Say that thou didst forsake " 

comment upon that oflTence " 
Wretched in this alone, that thou 

raayst take " 

it deiaends upon that love of thine " 

Than that which on thy humour " 

Since that my life on thy revolt " 
■what's so blessed fair that fears no 

blot " 

Therefore in that I cannot know " 

That in thy face sweet love should " 

They that have power " 

That do not do the thing " 

But if that flower " 

Lilies that fester smell far worse " 

That tongue that tells " 
all things turn to fair that eyes 

can see " 

graces that to thee resort " 

errors that in thee are seen " 

That leaves look pale " 

That heavy Saturn laugh'd " 

steal thy sweet that smells " 
Where art thou, Muse, that thou 

forget'st so long " 

To speak of that which gives " 

ear that doth thy lays esteem " 

That love is merchandized " 

Not that the summer is " 

But that wild music burthens " 

That having such a scope " 

That over-goes my blunt " 
To mar the subject that before 

was well " 
What's in the brain, that ink may 

character " 
That m^y express my love " 
So that eternal love ' " 
never say that I was false of heart " 
That is my home of love " 
Like him that travels " 
So that myself bring water " 
All frailties that besiege " 
That it could so preposterously " 
Most true it is that I have look'd " 
That did not better for my life " 
Thence comes it that my name re- 
ceives a brand " 
bitterness that I will bitter think " 
Even that your pity is enough " 
That my steel'd sense " 
that my adder's sense " 
That all the world besides " 
And that which governs " 
And that your love taught it " 
That mine eye loves it " 
lines that I before have writ " 
Even those that said I could not love " 
To give full growth to that which 

still doth grow " 
That looks on tempests " 
Accuse me thus : that I have scant- 
ed all " 
That I have frequent been " 



87 



88 


11 


88 


14 


89 


1 


89 


2 


91 


13 


92 


4 


92 


8 


92 


10 


92 


13 


93 


6 


93 


10 


94 


1 


94 


2 


94 


11 


94 


14 


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5 


95 


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96 


4 


96 


7 


97 


14 


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2 


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1 


100 


2 


100 


7 


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3 


102 


9 


102 


11 


103 


2 


103 


7 



103 10 



108 


1 


108 


4 


108 


9 


109 


1 


109 


5 


109 


6 


109 


8 


109 


10 


109 


11 


110 


'5 


111 


3 


111 


5 


111 


11 


111 


14 


112 


8 


112 


10 


112 


14 


113 


2 


114 


4 


114 


14 


115 


1 


115 


2 


115 


14 


116 


6 


117 


1 


117 


5 



Tliat— That I have hoisted sail Son 

ere that there were true needing " 
The ills that were not, grew " 

Drugs poison him that so fell sick 

of you " 

That better is by evil still made " 
That you were once unkind " 

And for that sorrow which " 

O, that our night of woe " 

But that your trespass now becomes " 
No, I am that I am, and they that 

level " 

Which shall above that idle rank 

remain " 

That poor retention could not " 

those tables that receive thee more " 
Time, thou shalt not boast that I 

do change " 

What thou dost foist upon us that 

is old " 

Than think that we before " 

not policy, that heretic " 

That it nor grows with heat " 

to this purpose that her skill " 

That every tongue says beauty " 
Upon that blessed wood " 

concord that mine ear confounds " 
those jacks that nimble leap " 

which should that harvest reap " 
the heaven that leads men to this 

hell " 

the breath that from my mistress 

reeks " 

That music hath a far more " 

some say that thee behold " 

that is not false I swear " 

Nor that full star that ushers in 

the even " 

Doth half that glory to the sober 

west " 

all they foul that thy complexion 

lack " 

Beshrew that heart that makes 

my heart " 

For that deep wound it gives " 

and all that is in me " 

confess'd that he is thine " 

Myself I'll forfeit, so that other 

mine " 

Under that bond that him as fast 

doth bind " 

Thou usurer that put'st forth all 

to use " 

am I that vex thee still " 

and me in that one ' Will " 

If thy soul check thee that I come 

so near " 

Swear to thy blind soul that I was 

thy 'Will 
That nothing me, a something " 

Make but my name thy love, and 

love that still " 

That they behold, and see not " 

Why should my heart think that 

a several plot " 

swears that she is made " 

That she might think me " 

thinking that she thinks me young " 
say not I that I am old " 



117 


7 


118 


8 


118 


10 


118 


14 


119 


10 


120 


1 


120 


2 


120 


9 


120 


13 



122 


3 


122 


9 


122 


12 



123 



123 


6 


123 


8 


124 


9 


124 


12 


126 


7 


127 


14 


128 


2 


128 


4 


128 


5 


128 


7 


129 


14 


130 


8 


130 


10 


131 


5 


131 


9 



132 



132 14 

183 1 

133 2 

133 14 

134 1 

134 3 



134 


10 


135 


3 


135 


14 



136 


2 


136 


12 


136 


13 


137 


2 


137 


9 


138 


1 


138 


3 


138 


5 


138 


10 



THAT 



284 



THAT 



That — That thy unkindness lays 

upon my heart Son 139 2 

That they elsewhere might dart " 139 12 

That I may not be so " 140 13 
'tis my heart that loves what they 

despise " 141 3 

That she that makes me sin " 141 14 

That have profaned " 142 6 
Root pity in thy heart, that, when 

it grows " 142 11 

To follow that which flies before her " 143 7 
So runn'st thou after that which 

flies from thee " 143 9 
I pray that thou mayst have thy 

'Will " 143 13 

And whether that ray angel be " 144 9 

lips that Love's own hand did make " 145 1 

the sound that said ' I hate " 145 2 

To me that languish'd for her sake " 145 3 

Chiding that tongue that ever sweet " 145 6 

That follow'd it ' " 145 10 

powers that thee array " 146 2 

And let that pine " 146 10 

Death, that feeds on men " 146 13 

For that which longer nurseth " 147 2 

Feeding on that which doth " 147 3 

Angry that his prescriptions " 147 6 

That censures falsely what " 148 4 

If that be fair whereon " 148 5 

That is so vex'd with watching " 148 10 

thee that I do call ray friend " 149 5 
On whom frowu'st thou that I do 

fawn upon " 149 6 

That is so proud " 149 10 

Those that can see " 149 14 

And swear that brightness " 150 4 

That in the very refuse " 150 6 
That, in my mind, thy worst all 

best exceeds " 150 8 

tell my body that he may " 151 7 

hold it that I call " 151 13 

valley-fountain of that ground " 153 4 
nymphs that vow'd chaste life to 

keep " 154 3 

votary took up that fire " 154 5 

and this by that I prove " 154 13 

scythed all that youth begun L C 12 

That season'd woe had " 18 

hands that lets not bounty fall " 41 

A reverend man that grazed his 

cattle " 57 

a blusterer, that the ruftie knew " 58 

If that from him there may " 68 

That maidens' eyes stuck over all " 81 

Each eye that saw him " 89 

velvet, on that termless skin " 94 

his visage by that cost more dear " 96 

That horse his mettle " 107 

' That he did in the general bosom 

reign " 127 

' Many there were that did his pic- 
ture get " 134 

fools that in the imagination set " 136 

' So many have, that never touch'd 

his hand " 141 

self, that did in freedom stand " 143 

That we must curb it " 163 

the sweets that seem so good " 164 

harms that preach in our behoof " 165 



That — a palate hath that needs will 

taste L C 167 

That's to ye sworn to none " 180 

offences that abroad you see " 183 

They sought their shame that so 

their shame did find " 187 

the many that mine eyes have seen " 190 

Figuring that they their passions " 199 

sonnets that did amplify " 209 

charged me that I hoard them not " 220 

That is to you my origin " 222 

yours that phraseless hand " 225 

sighs that burning lungs did raise " 228 

She that her fame " 243 

in that my boast is true " 246 

bosoms that to me belong " 254 

hearts that do on mine depend " 274 

battery that you make 'gainst mine " 277 

credent soul to that strong-bonded 

oath " 279 

That shall prefer and undertake " 280 

That flame through water " 287 

What breast so cold that is not 

warmed " 292 

That not a heart which " 309 

That the unexperient gave " 318 

0, that infected moisture " 323 

O, that false fire " 324 

O, that forced thunder " 325 

0, that sad breath " 326 

0, all that borrowed motion " 327 

swears that she is made of truth P P \ 1 

that she might think me "13 
thinking that she thinks me young "15 

says my love that she is young "19 

say not I that I am old " 1 10 

Since that our faults " 1 14 

That like two spirits do "22 

whether that my angel be "29 

Sun, that on this earth doth shine " 3 10 
those pleasures live that art can 

comprehend "56 

learned is that tongue that well "58 

ignorant that soul that sees "59 

some praise, that I thy parts admire " 5 10 

do not love that wrong " 5 13 

she hotter that did look "67 
His approach that often there 

• had been "68 
That Phoebus' lute, the queen of 

music, makes " 8 10 

plum that hangs upon a tree " 10 5 

Ah, that I had my lady " 11 13 

gloss that vadeth suddenly " 13 2 

A flower that dies " 13 3 

glass that's broken presently " 13 4 

that kept my rest away " 14 2 

that liked of her master " 16 2 
an Englishman, the fair'st that 

eye could " 16 3 
the combat doubtful that love 

with love did fight " 16 5 

That nothing could be used " 16 10 

That the lover, sick to death " 17 7 
My curtal dog, that wont to have 

play'd " 18 29 
Other help for him I see that 

there is none " 18 54 

the deer that thou shouldst strike " 19 2 



THAT 



285 



THE 



That — That thus dissembled her (fe- 

light iC 19 16 

That which Tvith scorn she put away " 19 18 

guiles that women work " 19 37 

toys that in them lark " 19 39 

The cock that treads them " 19 40 

Lest that my mistress hear " 19 50 

That hills and valleys " 20 3 

If that the world " 20 17 

That to hear it was great pity " 21 12 

That to hear her so complain " 21 15 

Every one that flatters thee " 21 31 

If that one be prodigal " 21 39 

they that fawn'd on him before " 21 49 

He that is thy friend " 21 51 

That defunctive music can P T 14 

That thy sable gender makest " 18 

That the turtle saw his right " 34 

That the self was not the same " 38 

That it cried, ' How true a twain " 45 

That are either true or fair " 66 

riiaw'd — wasted, thaw'd, and done VA 749 

when temperance is thaw'd R L 884 

The — Even as the sun V A 1 

of the weeping morn " 2 

hied him to the chase " 3 

The field's chief flower " 8 

Saith that the world " 12 

to the saddle-bow " 14 

The precedent of pith " 26 

the lusty courser's rein " 31 

■was the tender boy " 32 

The studded bridle " 37 

The steed is stalled up " 39 

To tie the rider " 40 

quench the maiden burning " 50 

feedeth on the steam " 63 

overflow the bank " 72 

by the stern and direful " 98 

foil'd the god of fight " 114 

The kiss shall be thine own " 117 

What seest thou in the ground " 118 

the day seem night " 122 

The tender spring " 127 

The spring doth yearly grow " 141 

trip upon the green " 146 

Dance on the sands " 148 

draw me through the sky " 153 

shadow in the brook " 162 

fresh beauty for the use " 164 

Upon the earth's increase " 169 

Unless the earth " 170 

By this the love-sick queen " 175 

the shadow had forsook them " 176 

tired in the mid-day heat " 177 

when they blot the sky " 184 

The sun doth burn • " 186 

Shall cool the heat " 190 

The sun that shines " 193 

The heat I have " 195 

darts forth the fire " 196 

the worse for one poor kiss " 207 

but the eye alone " 213 

now on the ground " 224 

Within the circuit " 230 

the pleasant fountains lie " 234 

her woes the more increasing " 254 

The time is spent " 255 

The strong-neck'd steed " 263 



The— The bearing earth VA 267 

The iron bit he crusheth " 2G9 

His nostrils drink the air " 273 

as if he told the steps " 277 

to captivate the eye " 281 

Of the fair breeder " 282 

would surpass the life " 289 

as if the dead the living " 292 

To bid the wind a base " 303 

the high wind sings " 305 

Fanning the hairs " 806 

scorns the heat he feels " 311 

and bites the poor flies " 316 

the unback'd breeder " 320 

With her the horse " 322 

unto the wood they hie " 323 

And now the happy season " 327 

the heart hath treble wrong " 329 

the aidance of the tongue " 330 

■when the heart's attorney " 335 

The client breaks " 336 

Looks on the dull earth " 340 

to the wayward boy " 344 

note the fighting conflict " 345 

Lightning from the sky . " 348 

disdain'd the wooing " 358 

takes him by the hand " 361 

once more the engine " 367 

palfrey from the mare " 384 

Welcomes the warm approach " 386 

set the heart on fire " 388 

The sea hath bounds " 389 

tied to the tree " 391 

Throwing the base thong " 395 

Teaching the sheets " 398 

To touch the fire, the weather 

being cold " 402 

the lesson is but plain " 407 

Who plucks the bud " 416 

The colt that's back'd " 419 

it will not ope the gate " 424 

that the sense of feeling " 439 

but the very smell " 441 

from the stillitory " 443 

wert thou to the taste " 445 

of the other four " 446 

not wish the feast " 447 

double-lock the door " 448 

disturb the feast " 450 

Once more the ruby-colour'd " 451 

Wreck to the seaman, tempest to 

the field " 454 

woe unto the birds " 455 

Even as the wind is hush'd " 458 

Or as the wolf doth grin " 459 

Or as the berry breaks " 460 

like the deadly bullet " 461 

the wounding of a frown " 465 

The silly boy, believing " 467 

Fair fall the wit " 472 

on the grass she lies " 473 

strikes her on the cheeks " 475 

To mend the hurt " 478 

The night of sorrow " 481 

Like the fair sun " 483 

He cheers the morn, and all the 

earth relieveth " 484 

And as the bright sun glorifies 

the sky " 485 



THE 



286 



THE 



The — the crystal tears gave light VA 

Shone like the moon " 

Or in the ocean drench'd, or in 
the fire 

from the dangerous year 

That the star-gazers 

the plague is banish'd 

the debt should double 

the ungrown fry forbears 

The mellow plum doth fall, the 
green sticks fast 

' Look, the world's comforter 

ended in the west 

The owl, night's herald 

The sheep are gone 

The honey fee of parting 

The heavenly moisture 

fall to the earth 

caught the yielding prey 

the insulter willeth 

pitch the price so high 

the sweetness of the spoil 

as the fleet-foot roe 

Or like the froward infant 

though the rose have prickles 

The poor fool prays 

The which, by Cupid's bow 

make the match 

To hunt the boar 

'The boar!' quoth she 

upon the blushing rose 

the very lists of love 

for the hot encounter 

by the eye and pine the maw 

The warm effects 

thou wouldst hunt the boar 

on the lion he will venture 

The thorny brambles 

all the world amazes 

as he roots the mead 

thou didst name the boar 

do abate the fire 

The picture of an angry-chafing 

upon the fresh flowers 

and hang the head 

tremble at the imagination 

The thought of it 

with the boar to-morrow 

the timorous flying hare 

Or at the fox 

Or at the roe 

creatures o'er the downs 

on foot the purblind hare 

Mark the poor wretch 

he outruns the wind 

The many musits, through the 
which he goes 

make the cunning hounds 

stop the loud pursuers 

The hot scent-snuffing 

the cold fault cleanly out 

were in the skies 

hears the passing-bell 

the dew-bedabbled wretch 

indenting with the way 
the hunting of the boar 
the story aptly ends 
The night is spent 
The earth, in love 



491 
492 

494 
608 
609 
610 
521 
526 

527 
529 
530 
531 
532 
538 
542 
546 
547 
550 
551 
553 
561 
562 
574 
578 
581 
686 
688 
589 
590 
595 
696 
602 
605 
614 
628 
629 
634 
636 
641 
654 
662 
665 
666 
668 
669 
672 
674 
675 
676 
677 
679 
680 
681 

683 
686 
688 
692 
694 
696 
702 
703 
704 
711 
716 
717 
722 



The — I perceive the reason VA 727 

To shame the sun " 732 

the curious workmanship " 734 

subject to the tyranny " 737 

the marrow-eating sickness " 741 

heating of the blood " 742 

And not the least " 745 

Whereat the impartial gazer " 748 

on the sudden wasted " 749 

with the mid-day sun " 750 

That on the earth " 753 

the lamp that burns " 755 

lend the world his light " 756 

by the rights of time " 759 

the world will hold thee " 761 

the hidden treasure frets " 767 

The kiss I gave you " 771 

strive against the stream " 772 

the wanton mermaid's songs " 777 

the tempting tune is blown " 778 

the deceiving harmony " 781 

Into the quiet closure " 782 

The path is smooth " 788 

is the bawd to lust's abuse " 792 

the hot tyrant stains " 797 

do the tender leaves " 798 

The text is old, the orator too green " 806 

from the sweet embrace " 811 

through the dark lawnd " 813 

Shooteth from the sky " 815 

glides he in the night " 816 

Till the wild waves " 819 

with the meeting clouds " 820 

did the merciless and pitchy night " 821 

Fold in the object " 822 

jewel in the flood " 824 

in the dark she lay " 827 

the fair discovery " 828 

all the neighbour caves " 830 

And still the choir " 840 

and outwore the night " 841 

to spend the night withal " 847 

Soothing the humour " 850 

Lo, here the gentle lark " 853 

And wakes the morning " 855 

The sun ariseth " 856 

Who doth the world " 857 

The beauteous influence " 862 

Musing the morning " 866 

she coasteth to the cry " 870 

the bushes in the way " 871 

catch her by the neck " 872 

she hears the hounds " 877 

The fear whereof " 880 

the timorous yelping of the hounds " 881 

But the blunt boar " 884 

the cry remaineth ■ " 885 

the dogs exclaim aloud " 886 

dare not stay the field " 894 

she spied the hunted boar " 900 

to rate the boar " 906 

She treads the path " 908 

Like the proceedings " 910 

asks the weary caitiff" " 914 

The only sovereign plaster " 916 

Against the welkin " 921 

to the ground below " 923 

how the world's poor people " 925 

Gloss on the rose, smell to the violet " 936 



THE 



287 



THE 



The— The Destinies will curse VA 

The crystal tide " 

In the sweet channel " 
through the flood-gates breaks the 

silver rain " 
Her eyes seen in the tears " 
The dire imagination " 
To wash the foul face of the slut- 
tish ground " 
The one doth flatter " 
the other kills thee " 
she unweaves the web " 
as I met the boar " 
the boar provoked my tongue " 
may the better thrive " 
As falcons to the lure '" 
The grass stoops not " 
The boar's foul conquest " 
murder'd with the view " 
Or, as the snail " 
Into the deep-dark cabins " 
To the disposing " 
And never wound the heart " 
As when the wind, imprison'd in 

the ground " 
Upon the wide wound that the 

boar had trench'd " 

makes the wound seem three " 
oft the eye mistakes, the brain 

being troubled " 

that's worth the viewing " 

The flowers are sweet " 
The sun doth scorn you, and the 

wind doth hiss you " 

the gaudy sun would peep " 

The wind would blow it " 

the lion walk'd along " 

The tiger would be tame " 

the wolf would leave " 

never fright the silly lamb " 

his shadow in the brook " 

The fishes spread on it " 

the birds such pleasure took " 
Ne'er saw the beauteous livery " 

Witness the entertainment " 

He ran upon the boar " 

the loving swine " 

the tusk in his soft groin " 

the more am I accurst " 

she falleth in the place " 

takes him by the hand " 

the woeful words she told " 

She lifts the coflfer-lids " 

the day should yet be light " 
The bottom .poison, and the top 

o'erstraw'd " 

the truest sight beguile " 

The strongest body " 
Strike the wise dumb, and teach 

the fool " 

to tread the measures " 

The staring ruflian " 



945 
957 
958 

959 
962 
975 

9S3 
989 
990 
991 
999 
1003 
1011 
1027 
1028 
1030 
1031 
1033 
1038 
1040 
1042 

1046 

1052 
1064 

, 1068 
. 1076 
. 1079 

. 1084 
. 1088 
, 1089 
. 1093 
. 1096 
. 1097 
. 1098 
. 1099 
. 1100 
. 1101 
. 1107 
. 1108 
. 1112 
. 1115 
. 1116 
. 1120 
. 1121 
. 1124 
,. 1126 
.. 1127 
.. 1134 

.. 1143 
.. 1144 
.. 1145 

.. 1146 
.. 1148 
.. 1149 



Pluck down the rich, enrich the poor" 1150 

the young old, the old become ' 

courage to the coward ' 

'twixt the son and sire ' 

By this the boy 

on the ground lay spill'd 

pale cheeks and the blood 



1152 
1158 
1160 
1165 
1167 
1169 



The — the new-sprung flower to smell Fvl 1171 

She crops the stalk, and in the 

breach appears " 1175 

Thou art the next of blood " 1184 

weary of the world " 1189 

through the empty skies " 1191 

From the besieged It L 1 

Borne by the trustless wings " 2 

leaves the Roman host " 3 

bears the lightless fire " 4 

with embracing flames the waist " 6 

Lucrece the chaste " 7 

To praise the clear " 11 

For he the night before " 15 

Unlock'd the treasure " 16 

the heavens had him lent " 17 

In the possession " 18 

As is the morning's " 24 

Against the golden splendour of 

the sun " 25 

in the owner's arms " 27 

The eyes of men " 30 

Collatine the publisher " 83 

to quench the coal " 47 

by the Roman dame " 51 

the golden age to gild " 60 

use it in the fight " 62 

the red should fence the white " 63 

the other queen " 66 

The sovereignty of either " 69 

The coward captive " 75 

The niggard prodigal " 79 

the false worshipper " 86 

the subtle-shining secrecies " 101 

Writ in the glassy margents " 102 

open'd to the light " 105 

Won in the fields " 107 

Far from the purpose " 113 

Upon the world " 118 

stows the day " 119 

wore out the night " 123 

The sundry dangers " 128 

is the meed proposed " 132 

the profit of excess " 138 

The aim of all is but to nurse the 

life " 141 

The death of all " 147 

The things we are " ..... 149 

The thing we have " 153 

Now stole upon the time the dead 

of night " 162 

Now serves the season " 166 

The silly lambs " 167 

Th' one sweetly flatters, th' other 

feareth harm " 172 

That from the cold stone " 177 

And to the flame " 180 

The dangers of his loathsome " 184 

humanity abhor the deed " 195 

the scandal will survive " 204 

the herald will contrive " 206 

shamed with the note " 208 

if I gain the thing " 211 

who will the vine destroy " 215 

but to touch the crown " 216 

Would with the sceptre " 217 

sorrow to the sage " 222 

The guilt being great, the fear 

doth still exceed " 229 



THE 



288 



THE 



The— The shame and fault R L 238 

ay, if the fact be known " 239 

The worst is but denial " 242 

Urging the worser sense " 249 

kindly by the hand " 253 

from the warlike band " 255 

the roses took away " 259 

in the flood " 266 

liove thrives not in the heart " 270 

The coward fights " 273 

beseems the sage " 277 

from the stage " 278 

to the unjust " 285 

And in the self-same seat " 289 

seeks to the heart " 293 

takes the worser part " 294 

The Roman lord " 301 

The locks between " 302 

Which drives the creeping thief " 305 

The threshold grates the door " 306 

crannies of the place " 310 

The wind wars " 311 

And blows the smoke " 312 

wind that fires the torch " 3)5 

by the light he spies " 316 

He takes it from the rushes " ...- 318 

the needle his finger pricks " 319 

He in the worst sense " 324 

The doors, the wind, the glove " 325 

stop the hourly dial " 327 

pays the hour his debt " 329 

those lets attend the time " 330 

sometime threat the spring " 331 

rejoicing to the prime ' " 332 

And give the sneaped birds " 333 

Pain pays the income " 334 

The merchant fears " 336 

unto the chamber door " 337 

from the heaven " 338 

from the blessed thing " 340 

As if the heavens " 343 

But in the midst " 344 

the eternal power " 345 

auspicious to the hour " 347 

The powers to whom " 349 

assist me in the act " 350 

The blackest sin " 354 

The eye of heaven is out " 356 

Covers the shame " 357 

pluck'd up the latch " 358 

the door he opens wide " 359 

The dove sleeps fast " 360 

Who sees the lurking serpent " 362 

Lies at the mercy " 364 

Into the chamber " 365 

The curtains being close " 367 

Which gives the watch-word " 370 

To draw the cloud that hides the 

silver moon " 371 

Look, as the fair " 372 

the curtain drawn " 374 

the period of their ill " 380 

Cozening the pillow " 387 

' Without the bed " 393 

On the green coverlet " 394 

daisy on the grass " 395 

to adorn the day " .... 399 

in the map of death " 402 

to heave the owner out " 413 



The— As the grim lion R L 421 

by the conquest satisfied " 422 

the onset still expecting " 432 

Gives the hot charge '• 4.34 

commends the leading " 436 

the heart of all her land " 439 

to the quiet cabinet " 442 

The sight which makes " 455 

the weak brain's forgeries " 460 

Who, angry that the eyes " 461 

To make the breach " 469 

Who o'er the white sheet " 472 

The reason of this rash alarm " 473 

The colour in thy face " 477 

makes the lily pale " 478 

And the red rose " 479 

the fault is thine " 482 

the growing rose defends " 492 

I think the honey " 493 

Or stop the headlong fury " 501 

tears ensue the deed " 502 

towering in the skies " 506 

Coucheth the fowl below " 507 

The scornful mark " 520 

And thou, the author " 523 

The fault unknown " 527 

The poisonous simple " 5.30 

The shame that from them " 535 

The blemish that will never " 536 

the picture of true piety " 542 

under the gripe's sharp claws " 543 

To the rough beast " 645 

the world doth threat " 547 

the aspii'ing mountains " 543 

the weak mouse panteth " 555 

In the remorseleis wrinkles " 562 

She puts the period " 565 

And midst the sentence " 566 

all the power of both " 572 

Mud not the fountain " 577 

Mar not the thing " 578 

To all the host " 598 

and if the same " 600 

the like offences prove " 613 

princes are the glass, the school, 

the book " 615 

And wilt thou be the school " 617 

thou didst teach the way " 630 

And wipe the dim mist " 643 

swells the higher " 646 

And with the wind " 648 

The petty streams " 649 

the ocean of thy blood " 655 

And not the puddle " 658 

The lesser thing should not the 

greater hide " 663 

The cedar stoops not to the base 

shrub's foot " 664 

at the cedar's root " 665 

Unto the base bed " 671 

upon the light " 673 

The wolf hath seized his prey, the 

poor lamb cries " 677 

with the nightly linen " 680 

in the chastest tears " 682 

The spots whereof " 685 

And Lust, the thief " 693 

as the full-fed hound " 694 

The prey wherein " 697 



THE 



289 



THE 



The— The flesh being proud R L 712 

The guilty rebel " 714 

through the length of times " 718 

To ask the spotted princess " 721 

through the dark night " 729 

Bearing away the wound " 731 

The scar that will " 732 

She bears the load " 734 

And he the burthen " 735 

on the direful night " 741 

looks for the morning light " 745 

behold the day " 74i; 

The same disgrace " 751 

Against the unseen " 763 

and the ravisher " 770 

to meet the eastern light " 773 

permit the sun to climb " 775 

ravish the morning air " 778 

The life of purity, the supreme fair " 780 

The silver-shining queeu " 786 

Seasoning the earth " 796 

Let not the jealous Day " 800 

That all the faults " 804 

to the tell-tale Day " 806 

The light will show " 807 

The story of sweet chastity " 808 

The impious breach " 809 

Yea, the illiterate " 810 

The nurse, to still her child " 813 

The orator, to deck " 815 

Will tie the hearers " 818 

The branches of another root " 823 

read the mot afar " 830 

And suck'd the honey " 840 

the worm intrude the maiden bud " 848 

The aged man " 855 

the harvest of his wits " 859 

The sweets we wish for " 867 

Even in the moment " 868 

wait on the tender spring " 869 

The adder hisses where the sweet 

birds sing " 871 

the traitor's treason " 877 

Thou set'st the wolf where he the 

lamb may get " 878 

Whoever plots the sin, thou point'st 

the season " 879 

to seize the souls " 882 

Thou makest the vestal " 883 

Thou blow'st the fire " 884 

the humble suppliant's friend " 897 

Give physic to the sick, ease to the 

pained " 901 

The poor, lame, blind " 902 

The patient dies while the physi- 
cian sleeps " 904 

The orphan pines while the op- 
pressor feeds " 905 

while the widow weeps " 906 

From the creation to the general 

doom " 924 

Betray'd the hours " 933 

fine the hate of foes " 936 

Not spend the dowry " 938 

To stamp the seal " 941 

To wake the morn and sentinel 

the night " 942 

To wrong the wronger " 943 

To pluck the quills " 949 

19 



Tlie— To dry the old oak's sap R L 950 

the giddy round " 952 

the beldam daughters " 958 

make the child a man " 954 

slay the tiger " 955 

tame the unicorn " .. .. 956 

To mock the subtle in themselves " 957 

cheer the ploughman " 958 

And the dire thought " 972 

the abusing of his time " 994 

the thief run mad " 997 

'The baser is he " 1002 

The mightier man, the mightier 

is the thing " 1004 

The moon being clouded " 1007 

' The crow may bathe " 1009 

with the filth away " 1010 

But if the like the snow-white 

swan desire " 1011 

The stain upon his silver down " 1012 

past the help of law " 1022 

The remedy indeed " 1028 

the self-same purpose " 1047 

the treasure stol'n away " ..... 1056 

the guiltless casket " 1057 

The stained taste " 1059 

I am the mistress " 1069 

hide the truth " 1075 

The well tuned warble " 1080 

the blushing morrow " 1082 

Continuance tames the one; the 

other wild " 1097 

The little birds " 1107 

the bottom of annoy " 1109 

To see the salve doth make the 

wound ache more " 1116 

the bounding banks o'erflows " 1119 

As the dank earth " 1180 

the diapason bear " 1132 

sing'st not in the day " 1142 

seated from the way " 1144 

As the poor frighted deer " 1149 

tread the way " 1152 

which of the twain " 1154 

Will slay the other " 1162 

which was the dearer " 1163 

When the one pure, the other 

made divine " 1164 

the bark peel'd from the lofty pine " 1167 

batter'd by the enemy " 1171 

Have heard the cause " 1178 

unto the knife " 1184 

The one will live, the other being 

dead " 1187 

to the skies " 1199 

Mine honour be the knife's " 1201 

wash the slander " 1207 

And wiped the brinish pearl " 1213 

But as the earth doth weep, the 

sun being set " 1226 

Even so the maid " 1228 

Which makes the maid weep like 

the dewy night " 1232 

the other takes in hand " 1235 

The weak oppress'd, the impres- 
sion of strange kinds " 1242 

the authors of their ill " 1244 

the semblance of a devil " 1246 

all the little worms " 1248 



THE 



290 



THE 



The — against the wither'd flower H L 
the flower hath kill'd 
The precedent whereof 
To the poor counterfeit 
replied the maid 
'The more to blame 
Yet with the fault 
ere the break of day 
The repetition cannot 
The cause craves haste 
o'er the paper 
the tenour of her woe 
the life and feeling 
may grace the fashion 
the better so to clear her 
which the world 
would not blot the letter 
For then the eye interprets to the 

ear 
The heavy motion 
The post attends 
Charging the sour-faced groom 
before the northern blast 
The homely villain 
Eeceives tlie scroll 
the worn-out age 
The more she saw the blood 
The more she thought 
And yet the duteous vassal 
The weary time 
Before the which is drawn the 

power of Greece 
the city to destroy 
Which the conceited painter 
kiss the turrets bow'd 
Shed for the slaughter'd husband 

by the wife 
The red blood reek'd, to show the 

painter's strife 
the labouring pioner 
And from the towers 
The very eyes 
Gazing upon the Greeks 
the painter interlaces 
The face of either 
But the mild glance 
encouraging the Greeks to fight 
charm'd the sight 
purl'd up to the sky 
the painter was so nice 
Tlie scalps of many 
to mock the mind 
to the eye of mind 
Stood for the whole 
And from the walls 
And from the strand 
the red blood ran 
the battle sought 
upon the galled shore 
In her the i^ainter 
Wanting the spring 
to the beldam's woes 
The painter was no god 
scratch out the angry eyes 
Of all the Greeks 
Show me the strumpet 
kindled the fire 
The sire, the son, the dame, and 

..daughter 



1254 
1255 
1261 
12fi9 
1277 
1278 
1279 
1280 
1-285 
1295 
1297 
1310 
1317 
1319 
1,320 
1321 
1322 

1325 
1326 
1333 
1334 
1335 
1338 
1340 
1350 
1357 
1358 
1360 
1361 

1368 
1369 
1371 
1372 

1376 

1377 
1380 
1382 
1383 
1384 
1390 
1396 
1399 
1402 
1404 
1407 
1412 
1413 
1414 
1426 
1428 
1429 
1436 
1437 
1438 
1440 
1450 
1455 
1458 
1461 
1409 
1470 
1471 
1475 

1477 



The — the private pleasure M L 1478 

Become the public plague " 1479 

rings out the doleful knell " 1495 

about the painting round " 1499 

•with the blunt swains " 1504 

In him the painter " 1506 

give the harmless show " 1507 

the fear that false hearts " 1512 

The well-skill'd workman " 1520 

The credulous old Priam " 1522 

burnt the shining glory " 1523 

that the skies were sorry " 1524 

And chid the painter " 1528 

the picture was belied " 1533 

in her mind the while " 1536 

She tears the senseless Sinon " 15R4 

the current of her sorrow " 1569 

Being from the feeling " 1578 

But now the mindful messenger 

come back " 1583 

rainbows in the sky " 1587 

by the bloodless hand '• 1597 

by the foe " 1608 

Begins the sad dirge " 1612 

shall fit the trespass best " 1013 

the fault amending " 1614 

Then be this all the task " 1618 

in the interest " 1619 

' For in the dreadful dead " 1625 

The loathsome act " 1636 

The lechers in their deed " 1637 

The adulterate death " 1645 

And far the weaker " 1647 

the judge is robb'd, the prisoner 

dies " 1652 

Or, at the least " 1654 

the hopeless merchant " 1660 

The grief away " 1664 

the violent roaring tide " 1667 

Outruns the eye " 1668 

Yet in the eddy " . ... 1669 

Back to the strait " 1670 

back the same grief draw " 1673 

the help that thou " 1685 

yet let the traitor die " 1686 

the hateful foe bewray'd " 1698 

The protestation stops " 1700 

'What is the quality " 1702 

with the foul act dispense " 1704 

The poison'd fountain " 1707 

The face, that map " 1712 

from the deep unrest " 1725 

unto the clouds bequeathed " 1727 

And from the purple fountain " 1754 

The murderous knife, and, as it 

left the place " 1735 

that the crimson blood " 1738 

About the mourning " 1744 

upon the tainted place " 1746 

If in the child the father's image 

lies " 1753 

And shiver'd all the beauty " 1763 

conquest of the stronger " 1767 

the faltering feeble souls " 1768 

The old bees die, the young pos- 
sess their hive " 1769 

the pale fear " 1775 

The deep vexation " 1779 

as if the name he tore " 1787 



THE 



291 



THE 



The — The one doth call her his, the 

other his B L 1793 

the claim they lay " 1794 

The father says 'She's mine " 1795 

The dispersed air, who, holding " 1805 

Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " 1S07 

He with the Romans " 1811 

To check the tears " 1817 

is woe the cure for woe " 1821 

mistook the matter so " 1826 

Now by the Capitol " 1835 

breeds the fat earth's store " 1837 

the death of this true wife " 1841 

And kiss'd the fatal knife " 1843 

protestation urged the rest " 1844 

Then jointly to the ground " 1846 

The Romans plausibly did give " 1854 

But as the riper Son 1 3 

the world's fresh ornament "19 

to the gaudy spring " 1 10 

Pity the world " 1 13 
To eat the world's due, by the 

grave and thee " 1 14 

Where all the treasure "26 

tell the face thou viewest "31 

Now is the time "32 

dost beguile the world "34 

Disdains the tillage "36 

will be the tomb "37 

Calls back the lovely April " 3 10 

The bounteous largess " 4 6 

lives th' executor to be " 4 14 

The lovely gaze "52 
Will play the tyrants to the very 

same "53 
pay the willing loan "66 
Lo, in the orient when the gra- 
cious light "71 
the steep-up heavenly hill "75 
he reeleth from the day " 7 10 
The eyes, 'fore duteous " 7 11 
If the true concord "85 
In singleness the parts "88 
The world will wail thee "94 
The world will be thy widow "95 
in the world doth spend "99 
still the world enjoys it " 9 10 
hath in the world an end " 9 11 
the user so destroys it " 9 12 
the times should cease " 11 7 
make the world away " 11 8 
she gave the more , " 11 11 
When I do count the clock " 12 1 
And see the brave day " 12 2 
the violet past prime " 12 3 
did canopy the herd " 12 6 
Borne on the bier " 12 8 
among the wastes of time " 12 10 
Against the stormy gusts " 13 11 
Not from the stars " 14 1 
Whereon the stars " 15 4 
even by the self-same sky " 15 6 
Then the conceit of this " 15 9 
on the top of happy hours "16 5 
So should the lines of life " 16 9 
I could write the beauty " 17 5 
The age to come would say " 17 7 
the darling buds " 18 3 
the eye of heaven shines " 18 5 



The — blunt thou the lion's paws Son 
make the earth devour " 

Pluck the keen teeth from the 

fierce tiger's jaws " 
And burn the long-lived " 
To the wide world " 
the master-mistress " 
Gilding the object " 
Is but the seemly raiment " 
actor on the stage " 
The perfect ceremony " 
be then the eloquence " 
eye hath play'd the painter " 
My body is the frame " 
For through the painter " 
where-through the sun " 
know not the heart " 
the marigold at the sun's eye " 
The painful warrior " 
Is from the book " 
And all the rest " 
The dear repose for limbs " 
which the blind do see " 
the benefit of rest " 
The one by toil, the other to com- 
plain " 
I tell the day " 
do blot the heaven ' " 
the swart-complesion'd night " 
thou gild'st the even " 
Like to the lark " 
When to the sessions " 
I sigh the lack " 
And moan the expense " 
The sad account " 
But if the while I think " 
As interest of the dead " 
Thou art the grave " 
Hung with the trophies " 
hast all the all of me " 
the bettering of the time " 
the height of happier men " 
Flatter the mountain-tops " 
the meadows green " 
the basest clouds to ride " 
And from the forlorn world " 
The region cloud " 
Suns of the world may stain " 
that through the cloud thou break " 
To dry the rain " 
heals the wound and cures not the 

disgrace " 

yet I have still the loss " 

The offender's sorrow " 

bear the strong oiFence's cross " 

0, give thyself the thanks " 

Be thou the tenth Muse " 
The pain be mine, but thine shall 

be the praise " 

all the better part of me " 

To entertain the time " 

But here's the joy " 

For all the day " 

To the clear day " 

in the living day " 

If the dull substance " 

Upon the farthest earth " 

As soon as think the place " 

The other two " 



19 


1 


19 


2 


19 


3 


19 


4 


19 


7 


20 


2 


20 


6 


22 


6 


23 


1 


23 


6 


23 


9 


24 


1 


24 


3 


24 


5 


24 


11 


24 


14 


25 


6 


25 


9 


25 


11 


25 


12 


27 


2 


27 


8 


28 


2 


28 


7 


28 


9 


28 


la 


28 


11 


28 


12 


29 


11 


30 


1 


80 


3 


30 


8 


30 


11 


30 


13 


31 


7 


31 


9 


31 


10 


31 


14 


32 


5 


32 


8 


33 


2 


33 


3 


33 


5 


33 


7 


33 


12 


33 


14 


34 


5 


34 


6 


34 


8 


34 


10 


34 


11 


34 


12 


3S 


5 


33 


9 


3S 


14 


39 


2 


39 


11 


42 


13 


43 


2 


43 


7 


43 


10 


44 


1 


44 


6 


44 


8 


45 


1 



THE 



292 



THE 



The— The first my thought, the 

other my desire Son 

the conquest of thy sight " 

the freedom of that right " 

But the defendant " 

all tenants to the heart " 
The clear eye's moiety and the 

dear heart's part " 

now unto the other " 

And to the painted banquet " 

Are left the prey " 

Within the gentle closure " 

from the thing it was " 
Within the knowledge of mine " 

To guard the lawful reasons " 

the strength of laws " 

I journey on the way " 

' Thus far the miles " 

The beast that bears me " 

the wretch did know " 

The bloody spur " 

excuse the slow oflfence " 

mounted on the wind " 

So am I as the rich " 

The which he will not " 

For blunting the fine point " 

in the long year set " 

jewels in the careanet " 

So is the time " 
the wardrobe which the robe doth 

hide " 

and the counterfeit " 
Speak of the spring and foison of 

the year " 

The one doth shadow " 

The other as your bounty " 

The rose looks fair " 

The canker-blooms " 
As the jierfumed tincture of the 

roses " 

nor the gilded monuments " 

root out the work of masonry " 

The living record " 

Even in the eyes " 

out to the ending doom " 

So, till the judgement " 

The spirit of love " 

like the ocean be " 

Which parts the shore " 

Come daily to the banks " 

may be the view " 

Upon the hours " 
chide the world-Without-endhour " 

watch the cluck for you " 

Nor think the bitterness " 

•at your hand the account " 

The imprison'd absence " 

The second burthen " 

courses of the sun " 

what the old world could say " 

levolution be the same " 

the wits of former days " 
Like as the waves make towards 

the pebbled shore " 

once in the main of light " 

the flourish set on youth " 

delves the parallels " 

Feeds on the rarities " 

eyelids to the weary night " 



45 


3 


46 


2 


46 


4 


46 


7 


46 


10 


46 


12 


47 


2 


47 


6 


48 


8 


48 


11 


49 


7 


49 


10 


49 


12 


49 


13 


50 


1 


50 


4 


50 


5 


50 


7 


50 


9 


51 


1 


51 


7 


52 


1 


52 


3 


52 


4 


52 


6 


52 


8 


52 


9 


52 


10 


53 


5 


53 


9 


53 


10 


53 


11 


54 


3 


54 


5 


54 


6 


55 


1 


55 


6 


55 


8 


55 


11 


55 


12 


55 


13 


56 


8 


56 


9 


56 


in 


56 


11 


56 


12 


57 


2 


57 


5 


57 


6 


57 


7 


58 


3 


58 


6 


59 


4 


59 


6 


59 


9 


59 


12 


59 


13 


60 


1 


60 


5 


60 


9 


60 


10 


60 


11 


61 


2 



The — The scope and tenour t 

To play the watchman 
the treasure of his spring 
The rich jjroud cost 
the hungry ocean gain 
the kingdom of the shore 
And the firm soil win of the 

watery main 
Against the wreckful siege 
The map of days outworn 
Before the golden tresses of the 

dead 
The right of sepulchres 
the world's eye doth view 
the thought of hearts can mend 
the voice of souls 
the eye hath shown 
the beauty of thy mind 
the rank smell of weeds 
The soil is this 
was ever yet the fair 
The ornament of beauty 
Thy worth the greater 
the sweetest buds doth love 
the ambush of young days 
the surly sullen bell 
the world that I am fled 
The hand that writ it 
Lest the wise world 
O, lest the world 
shake against the cold 
late the sweet birds sang 
the twilight of such day 
fadeth in the west 
the glowing of such fire 
That on the ashes 
As the death-bed 
The very part 
The earth can have 
the better part of me 
lost the dregs of life 
The prey of worms 
The coward conquest 
The worth of that 
showers are to the ground 
And for the peace of you 
Doubting the filching age 
the world may see my pleasure 
Why with the time 
ever the same 
For as the sun 
The vacant leaves 
The wrinkles which thy glass 
the dumb on high 
to the learnod's wing 
but mend the style 
Deserves the travail of a worthier 

pen 
And in the praise thereof 
wide as the ocean is 
The humble as the proudest 
The worst was this 
to all tlie world must die 
The earth can yield me 
When all the breathers 
even in the mouths of men 
The dedicated words 
the time-bettering days 
The barren tender 



61 


8 


61 


12 


63 


8 


64 


2 


64 


5 


64 


6 


64 


7 


65 


6 


68 


1 


68 


5 


68 


6 


69 


1 


69 


2 


69 


3 


69 


8 


69 


9 


69 


12 


69 


14 


70 


2 


70 


3 


70 


6 


70 


7 


70 


9 


71 


2 


71 


3 


71 


6 


71 


13 


72 


1 


73 


3 


73 


4 


73 


5 


73 


6 


73 


9 


73 


10 


73 


11 


74 


6 


74 


7 


74 


8 


74 


9 


74 


10 


74 


11 


74 


13 


75 


2 


75 


3 


75 


6 


75 


8 


76 


3 


76 


5 


76 


13 


77 


3 


77 


5 


78 


5 


78 


7 


78 


11 


79 


6 


80 


3 


80 


5 


80 


6 


80 


14 


81 


6 


81 


7 


81 


12 


81 


14 


82 


3 


82 


8 


83 


4 



THE 



293 



THE 



The — iminurod is the store 

by all the Muses filed 

to the most of praise 

for the breath of words 

Was it the proud 

Bound for the prize 

the womb wherein they grew 

The charter of thy worth 

The cause of this fair gift 

in the eye of scorn 

The injuries that to myself 

while the world is bent 

with the spite of fortune 

Come in the rearward 

But in the onset come 

At first the very worst 

a joy above the rest 

the worst of wrongs 

When in the least of them 

the false heart's history 
' do not do the thing 

They are the lords and owners 

The summer's flower is to the 
summer sweet 

The basest weed 

dost thou make the shame 

a canker in the fragrant rose 

Doth spot the beauty 

the story of thy days 

The hardest knife 

As on the finger 

The basest jewel 

the stern wolf betray 

the strength of all thy state 

the pleasure of the fleeting year 

The teeming autumn 

the wanton burthen of the prime 

the very birds are mute 

dreading the winter's near 

been absent in the spring 

Yet nor the lays of birds, nor the 

sweet smell 
at the lily's white 
the deep vermillion in the rose 
The forward violet 
The purple pride 
The lily I condemned 
The roses fearfully 
Sing to the ear 
though less the show 
The owner's tongue 
and then but in the spring 
Not that the summer 
did hush the night 
The argument, all bare 
To mar the subject 
Have from the forests 
the seasons have I seen 
When in the chronicle 
of the fairest wights 
Then, in the blazon 
nor the prophetic soul 
Of the wide world 
Can yet the lease 
The mortal moon 
And the sad augurs mock 
Now with the drops 
What's in the brain 
say o'er the very same 



Son 84 


3 


The— Weighs not the dust 


&n 108 


10 


" 85 


4 


Finding the first conceit 


" 108 


13 


" 85 


10 


Just to the time, not with the time 






" 85 


13 


exchanged 


" 109 


7 


" 86 


1 


a motley to the view 


" 110 


2 


" 8(3 


2 


next my heaven the best 


" 110 


13 


" 86 


4 


The guilty goddess 


" 111 


2 


" 87 


3 


like the dyer's hand 


" 111 


. 7 


" 87 


7 


doth the impression fill 


" 112 


1 


" 88 


2 


You are my all the world 


" 112 


5 


" 88 


11 


That all the world besides 


" 112 


14 


" 90 


2 


delivers to the heart 


" 113 


5 


" 90 


3 


hath the mind no part 


" 113 


7 


" 90 


6 


the rudest or gentlest sight 


" 113 


9 


" 90 


11 


The most sweet favour 


" 113 


10 


" 90 


12 


The mountain or the sea, the day 






" 91 


6 


or night 


" 113 


11 


" 92 


5 


The crow or dove 


" 113 


12 


" 92 


6 


the monarch's plague 


" 114 


2 


" 93 


7 


0, 'tis the first 


" 114 


9 


" 94 


2 


doth prepare the cup 


" 114 


12 


" 94 


7 


'tis the lesser sin 


" 114 


13 






blunt the sharp'st intents 


" 1 15 


7 


" 94 


9 


to the course of altering 


" 115 


8 


" 94 


12 


Crowning the present, doubting 






" 95 


1 


of the rest 


" 115 


12 


" 95 


2 


Let me not to the marriage 


" 116 


1 


" 95 


3 


the remover to remove 


" 116 


4 


" 95 


5 


It is the star 


" 116 


7 


" 95 


14 


even to the edge of doom 


" 116 


12 


" 96 


5 


sail to all the winds 


" 117 


7 


" 96 


6 


the level of your frown 


" 117 


11 


" 96 


9 


The constancy and virtue 


" 117 


14 


" 96 


12 


The ills that were not 


" 118 


10 


" 97 


2 


and find the lesson true 


" 118 


13 


" 97 


6 


In the distraction 


" 119 


8 


" 97 


7 


The humble salve 


" 120 


12 


" 97 


12 


And the just pleasure 


" 121 


3 


" 97 


14 


Or, at the least 


" 122 


5 


" 98 


1 


at the present nor the past 


" 123 


10 






but the child of state 


" 124 


1 


" 98 


5 


Under the blow 


" 124 


7 


" 98 


9 


Whereto th' inviting time 


" 124 


8 


" 98 


10 


call the fools of time 


" 124 


13 


" 99 


1 


I bore the canopy 


" 125 


1 


" 99 


3 


the outward honouring 


" 125 


2 


" 99 


6 


In the old age 


" 127 


1 


" 99 


8 


Fairing the foul 


" 127 


6 


" 100 


7 


The wiry concord 


" 128 


4 


" 102 


2 


To kiss the tender inward 


" 128 


6 


" 102 


4 


At the wood's boldness 


" 128 


8 


" 102 


5 


The expense of spirit 


" 129 


1 


" 102 


9 


make the taker mad 


" 129 


8 


" 102 


10 


this the world well knows 


" 129 


13 


" 103 


3 


To shun the heaven 


" 129 


14 


" 103 


10 


are nothing like the sun 


" 130 


1 


" 104 


4 


Than in the breath 


" 130 


8 


" 104 


6 


treads on the ground 


" 130 


12 


" 106 


1 


Thou art the fairest 


" 131 


4 


" 106 


2 


hath not the power 


" 131 


6 


" 106 


5 


truly not the morning sun 


" 132 


5 


" 107 


1 


the grey cheeks of the east 


" 132 


6 


" 107 


2 


that ushers in the even 


" 132 


7 


" 107 


3 


to the sober west • 


" 132 


8 


" 107 


5 


The statute of thy beauty 


" 134 


9 


" 107 


6 


He pays the whole 


" 134 


14 


" 107 


9 


The sea, all water 


' 135 


9 


" 108 


1 


the treasure of thy love 


' 136 


5 


" 108 


6 


Then in the number 


' 136 


9 



THE 



294 



THE 



The— Yet what the best is take the 

worst to be Son 137 4 

Be anchor'd in the bay " 187 6 

Whereto the judgement " 137 8 

the wide world's common place " 137 10 

in the world's false subtleties " 138 4 

are past the best " 138 6 

to justify the wrong " 139 1 

The manner of my pity-wanting " 140 4 

the likeness of a man " 141 11 

In pursuit of the thing "143 4 

And play the mother's part " 143 12 

The better angel is " 144 3 

The worser spirit " 144 4 

forth the sound that said " 145 2 

the centre of my sinful earth " 146 1 

nurseth the disease " 147 2 

doth preserve the ill " 147 3 

The uncertain sickly " 147 4 

the physician to my love " 147 5 

the truth vainly express'd " 147 12 

What means the world "148 6 

The sun itself sees not " 148 12 

the motion of thine eyes " 149 12 

the lie to my true sight " 150 3 

doth not grace the day " 150 4 

That in the very refuse " 150 6 

The more I hear " 150 10 

swear against the thing they see " 152 12 

against the truth so foul a lie " 152 14 

The boy for trial needs " 153 10 

the help of bath desired " 153 11 

the bath for my help " 153 13 

The little Love-god " 154 1 

The fairest votary " 154 5 

the general of hot desire " 154 7 

list the sad-tuned tale L C 4 

her visage from the sun " 9 

Whereon the thought " 10 

The carcass of a beauty " 11 

the silken figures in the brine " 17 

to the spheres intend " 23 

To the orbed earth " 25 

The mind and sight " 28 

and gave the flood " 44 

the lines she rents " 55 

that the ruffle knew " 53 

The swiftest hours " GO 

In brief the grounds " 63 

in the charity of age " 70 

The injury of many " 72 

occasion of the wind " 86 

did enchant the mind " 89 

the web it seem'd to-wear " 95 

noble by the sway " 1O8 

Whether the horse by him " ill 

by the well-doing steed " 112 

the verdict went " 113 

'So on the tip of his " 120 

the weeper laugh, the laugher weep " 124 

He had the dialect " 125 

in the general bosom reign " 127 

in the imagination set " 136 

The goodly objects which abroad " 137 

Than the true gouty " 140 

Reserved the stalk " 147 

which remain'd the foil " 153 

The destined ill " 156 

To put the by-past perils " 158 



The— To be forbod the sweets L 164 

The one a palate hath " 167 

And knew the pattei-ns " 170 

Are errors of the blood, none of 

the mind " 184 

Among the many " 190 

put to the smallest teen " 192 

the encrimson'd mood " 201 

With the annexions " 208 

'"The diamond, why " 211 

The deep-green emerald " 213 

The heaven-hued sapphire and 

the opal blend " 215 

desires the tender " 219 

the airy scale of praise " 226 

made the blossoms dote " 235 

The thing we have not " 240 

Playing the place " 241 

The scars of battle 'scapeth by the 

flight " 244 

The accident which brought " 247 

Upon the moment " 248 

the caged cloister fly " 249 

The broken bosoms " 254 

the suffering pangs it bears " 272 

The aloes of all forces " 273 

To leave the battery " 277 

the channel to the stream " 285 

the glowing roses " 286 

In the small orb " 289 

the inundation of the eyes " 290 

could 'scape the hail " 310 

Against the thing " 813 

the garment of a Grace " 316 

The naked and concealed " 317 

That the unexperient gave the 

tempter place " 318 

betray the fore-hetray'd " 328 

Unskilful in the world's PP I 4 

my years be past the best "16 

The truth I shall not know " 2 13 

Did not the heavenly rhetoric "31 

'Gainst whom the world "32 

Did court the lad "43 
The tender nibbler would not 

touch the bait " 4 11 

If knowledge be the mark "57 
the sun dried up the dewy morn "61 

the herd gone to the hedge "62 

Hot was the day "67 

on the brook's green brim " 6 10 

sun look'd on the world " 6 11 

the loss thereof still fearing " 7 10 

Yet in the midst " 7 11 
She framed the love, and yet she 

foil'd the framing " 7 15 

Bad in the best " 7 18 

the sister and the brother "82 

must the love be great "83 
Because thou lovest the one and I 

the other "84 

Upon the lute "86 

the sweet melodious sound "89 

the queen of music, makes " 8 10 
Fair was the morn when the fair 

queen of love "91 

Forbade the boy "98 

Deep in the thigh " 9 11 

' here was the soro " 9 12 



THE 



295 



THEE 



10 


2 


10 


6 


11 


3 


11 


5 


11 


7 


11 


8 


11 


10 


13 


9 


14 


4 


14 


12 


15 


1 


15 


2 


15 


4 


15 


6 


15 


9 


15 


13 


15 


14 


16 


1 


16 


3 


16 


5 


16 


6 


16 


8 


16 


9 


16 


11 


16 


13 


16 


14 



The — Pluck'd in the bud and vaded 

in the spring P P 

before the fall should be " 

She told the youngling " 

the warlike god embraced me " 

the warlike god unlaced me " 

As if the boy should use " 

did act the seizure " 

wither'd on the ground " 

on the doubts of my decay " 
As take the pain, but cannot pluck 

the pelf " 

throw gazes to the east " 
heart doth charge the watch ; the 

morning rise " 

the office of mine eyes " 

were tuned like the lark " 

The night so pack'd " ' 

the night would post " 

added to the hours " 

the fairest one of three " 

the fair'st that eye could see " 

was the combat doubtful " 
leave the master loveless, or kill 

the gallant knight " 

Unto the silly damsel " 

more mickle was the pain " 
For of the two the trusty knight " 

was victor of the day " 

did bear the maid away " 
the learned man hath got the lady 

gay " 16 15 

alack the day " 17 1 

in the wanton air " 17 4 
Through the velvet leaves the wind " 17 5 

That the lover " 17 7 

the heaven's breath " 17 8 

meetings on the plains " 18 46 

the cause of all my moan " IS 51 

hath chose the dame " 19 1 

And stall'd the deer " 19 2 

The strongest castle " 19 29 

The golden bullet " 19 30 

The wiles and guiles " 19 37 

The tricks and toys " 19 39 

The cock that treads " 19 40 

all the joys in bed " 19 47 

to round me on th' ear " 19 51 

all the pleasures prove " 20 2 

the craggy mountains yields " 20 4 

we sit upon the rocks " 20 5 

see the shepherds feed " 20 6 

If that the world " 20 17 

In the merry month " 21 2 

Save the nightingale " 21 8 

the dolefull'st ditty " 21 11 

like the wind " 21 33 

Let the bird of loudest lay FT 1 

On the sole Arabian tree " 2 

precurrer of the fiend " 6 

of the- fever's end " 7 

Save the eagle " 11 

Keep the obsequy " 12 

Let the priest in surplice " 13 

Be the death-divining . " 15 

Lest the requiem " 16 

With the breath " 19 

Here the anthem " 21 

and the turtle fled " 23 



The — Had the essence 
'Twixt the turtle 
That the turtle saw 
in the phoenix' sight 
was the other's mine 
the self was not the same 
To the phoenix and the dove 
the phoenix' nest 
And the turtle's loyal 

Thee — Nature that made thee 
I'll smother thee with kisses 
as I entreat thee now 
Shews thee unripe 
then I were not for thee 
think it heavy unto thee 
a shadow for thee 
that sun and thee 
not brought forth thee 
I'll give it thee again 
I have henim'd thee here 
To shelter thee from tempest 
No dog shall rouse thee 
smiles at thee in scorn 
I would assure thee 
bane would cure thee 
I heartily beseech thee 
his proceedings teach thee 
love by touching thee 
to thee be still as much 
hundred touches unto thee 
But having thee at vantage 
shakes thee on my breast 
That if I love thee 
seeing thee so indeed 
To make thee hate 
in love with thee 
to rob thee of a kiss 
Wherein she framed thee 
framing thee so fair 
will hold thee in disdain 
May lend thee light 
curse thee for this stroke 
bid thee crop a weed 
groan advantage thee 
makes thee ridiculous 
one doth flatter thee 
the other kills thee quickly 
I rail'd on thee 
that hath done thee wrong 
rock thee day and night 
thine eyes betray thee 
' Thus I forestall thee 
hath ensnared thee 
My will that marks thee 
must enjoy thee 
to destroy thee 
seeing thee embrace him 
gave drink to thee 
labour hence to heave thee 
I did entertain thee 
will make thee only loved 
When they in thee 
Must he in thee 
by him that gave it thee 
' To thee, to thee, my heaved- 

hands appeal' 
I will not hear thee 
shall rudely tear thee 
I mean to bear thee 



up 



PT 26 

" 31 

" 34 

" 35 

" 36 

" 38 

" 50 

" 50 

" 57 

VA 11 

" 18 

" 97 

" 128 

" 137 

" 156 

" 191 

" 194 

" 204 

" 209 

" 229 

" 238 

" 240 

" 252 

" 371 

" 372 

" 404 

" 406 

" 438 

" 442 

" 519 

" 635 

" 648 

" 660 

" 607 

" 711 

" 722 

" 723 

" 731 

" 744 

" 761 

" 864 

" 945 

" 946 

" 950 

" 988 

" 989 

" 990 

" 1002 

" 1005 

" 11S6 

PL 483 

" 484 

" 485 

" 487 

" 512 

" 514 

" 518 

" 577 

" 586 

" 596 

" 610 

" 613 

" 618 

" 624 

... 038 

... 667 

... 609 

... 670 



THEE 



296 



THEE 



Thee— Coming from thee 
such numbers seek for thee 
cry out for thee 
have to do with thee 
but he was stay'd by thee 
Would purchase thee 
my honour lives in thee 
To flatter thee 
smile at thee 
I will not poison thee 
To imitate thee well 
should thee behold 
shall I bequeath to thee 
my hand shall conquer thee 
Those tears from thee 
■wife that greeteth thee 
Hath thee befall'n 
On thee and thine 
and then I'll slaughter thee 
when I might charm thee so 
Thy father die, and not thy father 

thee 
by the grave and thee 
and she in thee 
thine image dies with thee 
largess given thee to give 
nature calls thee to begone 
must be tomb'd with thee 
In thee thy summer 
to breed another thee 
ten times refigured thee 
Leaving thee living in posterity 
do but sweetly chide thee 
Sings this to thee 
The world will wail thee 
form of thee hast left behind 
Make thee another self 
live in thine or thee 
She carved thee for her seal 
when he takes thee hence 
of thee this I prognosticate 
compare thee to a summer's day 
and this gives life to thee 
But I forbid thee 
as she wrought thee 
me of thee defeated 
she prick'd thee out 
■when in thee time's furrows 
beauty that doth cover thee 
myself, but for thee will 
to gaze therein on thee 
To thee I send this 
how I do love thee 
a zealous pilgrimage to thee 
For thee and for myself 
still farther off from thee 
Haply I think on thee 
the while I think on thee 
that hidden in thee lie 
parts of me to thee did give 
evermore acknowledge thee 
should do thee shame 
I love thee in such sort 
that best I wish in thee 
that cannot write to thee 
And he that calls on thee 
when I praise thee 
That due to thee 
I cannot blame thee 



B L 


843 


Thee — Although thou steal thee 


Son 40 


10 


" 


896 


lead thee in their riot 


" 41 


11 


" 


902 


tempting her to thee 


" 41 


13 


" 


911 


That she hath thee 


" 42 


3 


" 


917 


If I lose thee 


" 42 


9 , 


" 


963 


in dreams they look on thee 


" 43 


3/ 


" 


1032 


By looking on thee 


" 43 


10/ 


" 


1061 


to see till I see thee 


" 43 


13 


" 


10G5 


dreams do show thee me 


" 43 


14 


" 


1072 


removed from thee 


" 44 


6 


" 


1137 


Are both with thee 


" 45 


2 


" 


1143 


embassy of love to thee 


" 45 


6 


" 


1192 


messengers return'd from thee 


" 45 


10 


" 


1210 


and they with thee 


" 47 


12 


" 


1271 


Thee have I not 


" 48 


9 


« 


1304 


When I shall see thee frown 


" 49 


2 


" 


1599 


being made from thee 


" 50 


8 


« 


1630 


when from thee I speed 


" 51 


2 


" 


1634 


Since from thee going 


" 51 


13 


" 


1681 


Towards thee I'll run 


" 51 


14 






shadows like to thee do mock 


" 61 


4 


" 


1771 


that thou send'st from thee 


" 61 


5 


Son 1 


14 


For thee watch I 


" 61 


13 


" 3 


9 


'Tis thee, myself, that for myself I 






" 3 


14 


praise 


" 62 


13 


" 4 


6 


Those parts of thee 


" 69 


1 


" 4 


11 


give thee that due 


" 69 


S 


" 4 


13 


that give thee so thine own 


" 69 


6 


6 


2 


still with thee shall stay 


" 74 


4 


6 


7 


was consecrate to thee 


" 74 


6 


6 


10 


Too base of thee 


" 74 


12 


" 6 


12 


and this with thee. remains 


" 74 


14 


8 


7 


Thy glass will show thee 


" 77 


1 


8 


14 


will give thee memory 


" 77 


6 


9 


4 


Shall profit thee 


" 77 


14 


9 


6 


invoked thee for my Muse 


" 78 


1 


" 10 


13 


under thee their poesy 


" 78 


4 


" 10 


14 


is thine and born of thee 


" 78 


10 


" 11 


13 


Yet what of thee thy poet 


" 79 


7 


" 12 


14 


He robs thee of, and pays it thee 






" 14 


13 


again 


" 79 


8 


" 18 


1 


He lends thee virtue 


" 79 


9 


" 18 


14 


No praise to thee but what in thee 






" 19 


8 


doth live 


" 79 


12 


" 20 


10 


Since what he owes thee 


" 79 


14 


" 20 


11 


gives thee releasing 


" 87 


3 


" 20 


13 


My bonds in thee 


" 87 


4 


" 22 


3 


For how do I hold thee 


" 87 


5 


" 22 


5 


Thus have I had thee 


" 87 


13 


" 22 


10 


And prove thee virtuous 


" 88 


4 


" 24 


12 


my loving thoughts on thee 


" 88 


10 


" 26 


3 


Doing thee vantage 


" 88 


12 


" 26 


13 


to thee I so belong 


" 88 


13 


" 27 


6 


For thee, against myself 


" 89 


13 


" 27 


14 


Compared with loss of thee 


" 90 


14 


" 28 


8 


And having thee 


" 91 


12 


" 29 


10 


chose out thee 


" 95 


10 


" 30 


13 


graces that to thee resort 


" 96 


4 


" 31 


8 


that in thee are seen 


" 96 


7 


" 31 


11 


I love thee in such sort 


" 96 


13 


" 36 


9 


From thee, the pleasure 


" 97 


2 


" 36 


10 


his pleasures wait on thee 


" 97 


11 


" 36 


13 


it had stol'n from thee 


" 99 


14 


" 37 


13 


gives thee all my might 


" 100 


2 


" 38 


7 


for't lies in thee 


" 101 


10 


" 38 


11 


I teach thee how 


" 101 


13 


'' 39 


4 


to thee my true spirit 


" 108 


2 


" 39 


8 


proved thee my best of love 


" 110 


8 


" 40 


6 


of thee, thy record 


" 122 


8 



THEE 



297 



THEIR 



Thee — that receive thee more Son 

to remember thee " 
Thy registers and thee I both defy " 

despite tliy scythe and thee " 

only me for thee " 

still will pluck thee back " 

keeps thee to this purpose " 

quietus is to render thee " 

by thee blushing stand " 

some say that thee behold " 

mourning doth thee grace " 

Of him, myself, and thee " 

for I, being pent in thee " 

am I that vex thee still " 

If thy soul check thee " 

so it please thee hold " 

a something sweet to thee " 

Let me excuse thee " 

If I might teach thee wit " 

might speak ill of thee " 

I do not love thee " 

in thee a thousand errors note " 

feast with thee alone " 

from serving thee " 

Be it lawful I love thee " 

as mine importune thee " 

that which flies from thee " 

chase thee afar behind " 

powers that thee array " 
For I have sworn thee fair, and 

thought thee bright " 

say I love thee not " 

myself with thee partake " 

Do I not think on thee " 

Who hateth thee " 
Who taught thee how to make me 

love thee more " 

I to be beloved of thee " 

doth point out thee " 

In loving thee " 

breach do I accuse thee " 

hut to misuse thee " 

faith in thee is lost " 

And, to enlighten thee " 

For I have sworn thee fair " 

In thee hath neither sting L C 
Vows for thee broke P P 

I forswore not thee " 

in thee it is " 

to thee I'll constant prove " 

to thee like osiers bowed " 

to know thee shall suffice " 

that well can thee commend " 

that sees thee without wonder " 

be great 'twixt thee and me " 

Dowland to thee is dear " 

and both in thee remain " 

I weep for thee " 

I craved nothing of thee " 

I pardon crave of thee " 
Age, I do abhor thee ; youth, I do 

adore thee " 
Age, I do defy thee ; O, sweet shep- 
herd, hie thee " 
Ne'er to pluck thee " 
and say thee nay " 
though she put thee back " 
make thee a bed of roses " 
these pleasures may thee move " 



122 


12 


122 


13 


123 


9 


123 


14 


125 


12 


126 


6 


126 


7 


126 


12 


128 


8 


131 


5 


132 


11 


133 


7 


133 


13 


135 


3 


136 


1 


136 


11 


136 


12 


139 


9 


140 


5 


140 


10 


141 


1 


141 


2 


141 


8 


141 


10 


142 


9 


142 


10 


143 


9 


143 


10 


146 


2 


147 


13 


149 


1 


149 


2 


149 


3 


149 


5 


150 


9 


150 


14 


151 


9 


152 


1 


152 


5 


152 


7 


152 


8 


152 


11 


152 


13 




265 


3 


4 


3 


6 


3 


11 


5 


3 


5 


4 


5 


7 


5 


8 


5 


■^ 


S 


3 


8 


5 


8 


14 


10 


7 


10 


10 


10 


11 


12 


9 


12 


11 


17 


12 


19 


20 


19 


36 


20 


9 


20 


15 



Thee— To live with thee PP 

they cannot hear thee 
they will not cheer thee 
Even so, poor bird, like thee 
Every one that flatters thee 
He will help thee 
He with thee doth bear a part 
Tlieft — and complain on theft V A 

ransack'd by injurious theft R L 

of murder and of theft " 

But for his theft Son 

Their — amid their plenty VA 

their elbows and their hips " 

gather'd in their prime " 

Herbs for their smell " 

by their own direction " 

Open'd their mouths " 

wither in their prime " 

borrow'd all their shine " 

true leaders to their queen " 

let their crimson liveries " 

their verdure still endure " 

birds to their nest " 

Their lips together " 

take counsel of their friends " 

hounds mistake their smell " 

pursuers in their yell " 

their clamorous cry " 

do thej'^ spend their mouths " 

their loud alarums " 

Their light blown out " 

Their copious stories " 

from their strict embrace " 

Finding their enemy " 

their captain once doth yield ■' 

clapping their proud tails " 

Shaking their scratch'd ears " 

began to turn their tide " 

their office and their light " 

By their suggestion " 

from their dark beds " 

their colours fresh and trim " 

on it their golden gills " 

some other in their bills " 

Their virtue lost " 

their lives shall not enjoy " 

upon their whiteness stood " 

Their mistress mounted " 

Holding their course to Paphos, 

where their queen " , 

hap which their superiors want R L . 
Their silver cheeks, and call'd it 

then their shield 
from world's minority their right 
Yet their ambition 
In their pure ranks 
from their parling looks 
unloose it from their bond 
that I their father had not been 
Mine eyes forego their light 
with their opposite persuasion 
flatter'd by their leader's jocund 

show 
And as their captain, so their 

pride doth grow 
construes their denial 
till their effects be tried 
By their high treason 
the period of their ill 



20 

21 

22 

27 

31 

52 

50 

IGO 

838 

918 

12 

20 

44 

131 

165 

216 

248 

418 

488 

503 

506 

507 

532 

546 

640 



693 

695 

700 

826 

845 

874 

887 

893 

923 

924 

979 

1039 

1044 

1050 

1079 

1100 

1102 

1131 

1164 

1170 

1191 

1193 

42 

61 

67 

68 

73 

100 

136 

210 

228 

286 



298 
324 
353 
369 
380 



THEIR 



298 



THEIR 



Their— Lucrece to their sight B L 384 

had sheathed their light " 397 

Save of their lord " 409 

Swell in their pride " 432 

bids them do their liking " 434 

Left their round turrets " 441 

Where their dear governess " 443 

confusion of their cries " 445 . 

fly from their lights " 461 

Thy kinsmen hang their heads " f>21 

the author of their obloquy " 5^3 

bequeath not to their lot " 534 

not their own infamy " 539 

from their biding " 550 

Hindering their present fall " 551 

with their continual motion " 591 

Their own transgressions " 634 

That from their own misdeeds 

askance their eyes " 637 

To their salt sovereign, with their 

fresh falls' haste " 650 

and thou their slave " 659 

Thou their fair life " 661 

loathed in their shame " 662 

And by their mortal fault " 724 

forestall their will " 728 

To have their unseen sin " 753 

For they their guilt - " 754 

Let their exhaled " 779 

That in their smoky ranks " 783 

makes short their pilgrimage " 791 

To cross their arms and hang 

their heads " 793 

To mask their brows and hide 

their infamy " 794 

of their own behests " 852 

Who in their pride " 864 

Their father wag too weak " 865 

To hold their cursed-blessed " 866 

as their pages " 910 

their glittering golden towers " 945 

alter their contents " 948 

lose their mildness " 979 

in their wildness " 980 

tune their morning's joy " 1107 

their sweet melody " 1108 

to change their kinds " 1147 

doth melt their snow " 1218 

quench their light " 1231 

Their gentle sex " 1237 

they drown their eyes or break 

their hearts " 1239 

authors of their ill " 1244 

Their smoothness, like a goodly " 1247 

are their own faults' books " 1253 

tenants to their shame " 1200 

guilt within their bosoms lie " 1342 

beholds their blame " 1343 

both their faces blazed " 1353 

gleam'd forth their ashy lights . " 1378 

in their faces " 1388 

Their face their manners most ex- 
pressly told " 1397 

did their ears entice " 1411 

And in their rage " 1419 

When their brave hope " 1430 

To see their youthful sons " 1432 

And to their hope " 1433 

That through their light " 1434 



Tlieir — and their ranks began M L 1439 

shoot their foam " 1442 

she their looks doth borrow " 1498 

shot from their fixed places " 1525 

When their glass fell wherein they 

view'd their faces " 1526 

To think their dolour " 1582 

The lechers in their deed " 1637 

Knights, by their oaths " 1694 

We are their offspring " 1757 

The young possess their hive " 1769 

Answer'd their cries " 1806 

such emulation in their woe " 1808 

to the ground their kneestheybow " 1846 

Leese but their show; their sub- 
stance still lives Son 5 14 

Vaunt in their youthful sap " 15 7 

And wear their brave state " 15 8 

yellow'd with their age "17 9 

eye more bright than theirs " 20 5 

thy love's use their treasure " 20 14 

want to grace their art " 24 13 

favour with their stars " 25 1 

their fair leaves spread " 25 5 

their pride lies buried " 25 7 

they in their glory die " 25 8 

Who all their parts " 31 11 

Their images I loved " 31 13 

not for their rhyme " 32 7 

Theirs for their style " 32 14 

in their rotten smoke " 34 4 

Who lead thee in their riot " 41 11 

And by their verdict " 46 11 

their masked buds disclose " 54 8 
But, for their virtue only is their 

show " 54 9 
Of their sweet deaths " 54 12 
hasten to their end " 60 2 
o'ersways their power " 65 2 
Then, churls, their thoughts, al- 
though their eyes were kind " 69 11 
Showing their birth " 76 8 
their poesy disperse " 78 4 
Of their fair subject " 82 4 
And their gross painting " 82 13 
Eeserve their character " 85 3 
Making their tomb " 86 4 
have done their spite " 90 10 
glory in their birth, some in their 

skill " 91 1 
in their wealth, some in their 

body's force " 91 2 

Some in their garments " 91 3 
" Some in their hawks and hounds, 

some in their horse " 91 4 

owners of their faces " 94 7 

of their excellence " 94 8 

turn sourest by their deeds " 94 13 

Which for their habitation " 95 10 

after their lords' decease " 97 8 

Or from their proud lap " 98 8 

lose their dear delight " 102 12 

I see their antique pen " 106 7 

So all their praises " 106 9 

mock their own presage " 107 6 

their spheres been fitted " 119 7 

Which in their wills " 121 8 

reckon up their own ' " 121 10 

By their rank thoughts " 121 12 



THEIR 



299 



THEMSELVES 



Their — and in tlieir badness reign Son 121 14 

in their gazing spent " 125 8 

becoming of their woe " 127 13 

would change their state " 128 9 

might dart tlieir injuries " 139 12 

when their deaths be near " 140 7 

from their physicians know " 140 8 

their scarlet ornaments " 142 6 

revenues of their rents " 142 8 

levell'd eyes their carriage ride L C 22 

their poor balls are tied " 24 

Their view right on ; anon their 

gazes lend " 26 

their sepulchres in mud " 46 

so breaking their contents " 56 

their silken parcels " 87 

made fairer by their place " 117 

j'et their purposed trim " 118 

Ask'd their own wills, and made 

their wills obey " 133 

To serve their eyes, and in it put 

their mind " 135 

Tiiey sought their shame that so 

their shame did find " 187 

their reproach contains " 1S9 

their passions likewise lent " 199 

these talents of their hair " 204 

Their kind acceptance " 207 

their sickly radiance do " 214 

Since I tlieir altar " 224 

Their distract parcels " 231 

their fountains in my well " 255 

supplicant their sighs " 276 

which their hue encloses " 287 

and eyes their wished sight P P 15 10 

Forth their dye " IS 40 

shepherds feed their flocks " 20 6 

to their tragic scene P T 52 

not their infirmity " 60 

Theirs — . . . . whose desperate hands VA 765 

theirs in thought assign'd L C 138 

Them — But rather famish them VA 20 

Making them red and pale " 21 

fan and blow them dry " 52 

the shadow had forsook them " 176 

hotly overlook them " 178 

quench them with my tears " 192 

unto the wood they hie them " 323 

strive to overfly them " 324 

was then between them " 355 

as they had not seen them " 357 

taught them scornful tricks " 501 

pay them at thy leisure " 518 

picks them all at last " 576 

Doth make them droop " 666 

If thou destroy them not " 760 

She, marking them " 835 

she hears them chant it " 869 

She tells them " 897 

Bids them leave quaking, bids 

them fear no more " 899 

Infusing them with dreadful pro- 
phecies " 928 

opens them again " 960 

makes them wet again " 966 

are both of them extremes " 987 

Could rule them both " 1008 

bids them still consort " 1041 

He fed them with his sight " 1104 



Them— Which of them both iJ L 53 

Teaching them thus " 02 

makes them still to fight " 68 

lest between them both " 74 

That dazzleth them " 377 

As if between them twain " 405 

bids them do their liking " 434 

In darkness daunts them " 462 

from them no device can take " 535 

drop on them iierjietually " 686 

but he that gives them knows " 833 

that we call them ours " 868 

wait on them as their pages " 910 

keep them from thy aid " .912 

little stars may hide them " 1008 

sorrows bear them mild " 1096 

Is form'd in them by force " 1243 

Then call them not the authors " 1244 

for I have them here " 1290 

might become them better " 1323 

more than hear them told " 1^24 

he saw them quake and tremble " T393 

She lends them words " 1498 

and make them bold " 1559 

prepares to let them know " 1607 

To tell them all " 1617 

in them doth stand disgraced " 1833 

in them I read such art Son 14 10 

Let them say more " 21 13 

Compare them with " 32 5 

Eeserve them for my love " 32 7 

yea, take them all " 40 1 

I send them back again " 45 14 

And I am still with them " 47 12 

and he in them still green " 63 14 

When in the least of them " 92 6 

pluck them where they grew " 98 8 

it shapes them to your feature " 113 12 

Therefore to give them " 122 11 

rather make them born " 123 7 

before have heard them told " 123 8 

Give them thy fingers " 128 14 

proudly make them cruel " 131 2 

Or made them swear " 152 12 

Bidding them find L C 46 

moe pleasures to bestow them " 139 

which doth owe them " 140 

supposed them mistress " 142 

Love made them not " 185 

Harm have I done to them " 194 

that I hoard them not " 220 

But yield them up " 221 

I strong o'er them " 257 

And, veil'd in them " 312 

cherubin, above them hover'd " 319 

to turn them both to gain P P 16 10 

toys that in them lurk " 19 39 

The cock that treads them " 19 40 

time with age shall them attaint " 19 46 

But in them it were a wonder P T 32 

So between them love did shine " 33 

Theme — leave this idle theme VA 422 

your idle, overhandled theme " 770 

If that be made a theme B L 822 

Three themes in one Son 105 12 

Themselves — Rot and consume .... F^ 132 

Things growing to themselves " 166 

hands themselves do slay " 765 

Do burn themselves " 810 



THEMSELVES 



300 



THEN 



Themselves — If pleased themselves VA 843 

of day, themselves withdrew " 1032 

to rest themselves betake R L 125 

keep themselves enclosed " 378 

themselves so beautify " 404 

do seldom to themselves appear " 633 

which they themselves behold " 751 

Which not themselves " 833 

in themselves beguiled " 957 

Grieving themselves to guess " 1238 

beauties do themselves forsake Son 12 11 

And in themselves their pride " 25 7 

Die to themselves " 54 11 

are themselves as stone " 94 3 

now crown themselves assured " 107 7 
though they themselves be bevel " 121 11 

All aids, themselves made fairer L C 117 

To themselves yet either P T 43 

TIteu — Then with her windy sighs VA 51 

Then why not lips on lips " 120 

then wink again " 121 

Then mightstthou pause, for then 

I were not for thee " 137 

Then woo thyself " 159 

and then his hand " 223 

Then be my deer " 239 

Then, like a melancholy " 313 

was then between them " 355 

then love's deep groans " 377 

and then I chase it " 410 

Incorporate then they seem " 540 

But then woos best " 570 

U, had she then gave over " 571 

Then do they spend " 695 

Then shall thou see " 703 

then the story aptly ends " 716 

O, then imagine this " 721 

'Nay, then,' quoth Adon " 769 

And then my little heart " 783 

then he had spoke " 943 

then join they all together " 971 

Then, gentle shadow " 1001 

and then she reprehends " 1065 

then would Adonis weep " 1090 

why then I know " 1109 

What needeth then E L 31 

Then virtue claims " 59 

call'd it then their shield " 61 

For then is Tarquiu " 120 

so then we do neglect " 152 

Then where is truth " 158 

Then looking scornfully " 187 

Then my digression " 202 

Tiien white as lawn " 259 

and then it faster rock'd " 262 

' Why hunt I then " 267 

'Then, childish fear, avaunt " 274 

Then who fears sinking " 280 

How can they then " 350 

' Then Love and Fortune " 351 

Then had they seen " 380 

Then Collatine again " 381 

then force must work " 513 

' Then, for thy husband " «... 533 

do not then ensnare me " 584 

Then kings' misdeeds " 609 

then most doth tyrannize " 676 

And then with lank " 708 

' So then he hath it " 862 



Then — How comes it then 

O, hear me then 

True sorrow then 

Then let it not 

And then they drown their eyes 

Then call them not 

For then the eye 

Then little strength rings out 

and then she longs 

Then he this all the task 

and then I'll slaughter thee 

And then against my heart 

let it then suffice 

Then live, sweet Lucrece 

And then in key-cold 

Then son and father weep 

Then jointly to the ground 

Then being ask'd 

Then, beauteous niggard 

Then how, when nature calls 

Then, were not summer's 

Then let not winter's 

Then what could death do 

Then of thy beauty 

then you were 

Then the conceit of this 

And then believe me 

Then look I death 

How can I then be elder 

be then the eloquence 

Then happy I 

Then may I dare to boast 

then not show my head 

then begins a journey 

For then my thoughts 

How can I then return 

and then my state 

That then I scorn 

Then can I drown an eye 

Then can I grieve 
O, then vouchsafe me 
So then I am not lame 
then ten times happy me 
hast thou then more 
Then, if for my love 
then she loves but me alone 
then do mine eyes best see 
Then thou, whose shadow 
For then, despite of space 
No matter then although 
then no longer glad 
then my eye doth feast 
my poor beast then find 
Then should I spur 
Then can no horse 
Then, churls, their thoughts 
Then thou alone kingdoms 
then should make you woe 
So then thou hast but lost 
Then better'd that the world 
Then thank him not 
Then if he thrive 
Then others for the breath 
Then lack'd I matter 
worth then not knowing 
Then hate me 
Then need I not to fear 
Then do thy office. Muse 
and then but in the spring 



Ji L 


895 


" 


930 


" 


1112 


" 


1174 


" 


1239 


" 


1244 


" 


1325 


" 


1495 


" 


1571 


" 


1618 


" 


1634 


" 


1640 


" 


1679 


" 


1770 


" 


1774 


" 


1791 


" 


1846 


Son 2 


5 


4 


5 


4 


11 


5 


9 


6 


1 


6 


11 


" 12 


9 


" 13 


6 


" 15 


9 


" 21 


10 


" 22 


4 


" 22 


8 


" 23 


9 


" 25 


13 


" 26 


13 


" 26 


14 


" 27 


3 


" 27 


5 


" 28 


1 


" 29 


10 


" 29 


14 


" 30 


5 


" 30 


9 


" 32 


9 


" 37 


9 


" 37 


14 


" 40 


2 


" 40 


5 


" 42 


14 


" 43 


1 


" 43 


5 


" 44 


3 


" 44 


5 


" 45 


13 


" 47 


5 


" 51 


5 


" 51 


7 


" 51 


9 


" 69 


11 


" 70 


14 


" 71 


8 


" 74 


9 


" 75 


8 


" 79 


13 


" 80 


13 


" 85 


18 


" 86 


14 


" 87 


9 


" 90 


1 


" 92 


5 


" 101 


13 


" 102 


5 



THEN 



301 



THEREFORE 



Then — ^Were it not sinful then So7i 103 9 

Then, in tlie blazon " 106 5 

Then give me welcome " 110 13 

Pity me then and wish " 111 8 

Pity me then, dear friend " 111 13 

Yet then my judgement " 115 3 

Might I not then say " 115 10 

Then might I not say so " 115 13 

which I then did feei "1.0 2 

you to me, then tender'd " 120 11 

then her breasts are dun " 130 3 

let it then as well beseem " 132 10 

Then will I swear " 132 13 

But then my friend's heart " 133 10 

Thou canst not then use rigour " 133 12 

Then in the number " 136 9 

And then thou lovest me " 136 14 

Then, soul, live thou "146 9 

there's no more dying then " 146 14 

then love doth well denote " 148 7 

No marvel then " 148 11 

Then, gentle cheater " 151 3 

O, then, advance of yours L C 225 

' "How mighty then you are " 253 

Whose sights till then " 282 

Then thou, fair sun PP 3 10 

then it is no fault of mine " 3 12 

Then fell she on her back " 4 13 

Then must the love be great "83 

And then she cllpp'd Adonis " 11 6 

Then, lullaby, the learned man " 16 15 

And then too late " 19 15 

you bad not had it then " 19 24 

Then live with me " 20 16 

Then farewell his great renown " 21 48 

Then — There is no heaven by holy 

then " 19 45 

Then — the galled shore, and than M L 1440 

Thence — thence doth little harm VA 195 

And when from thence " 227 

As if from thence " 488 

He carries thence incaged ' " 582 

creejas sadly thence R L 736 

He thence departs " 743 

And bids it leap from thence " 760 

no water thence proceeds " 1552 

that thence her soul " 1724 

to bear dead Lucrece thence " 1850 

thence thou wilt be stol'n Son 48 13 

why should I haste me thence " 51 3 

of any fear from thence " 86 12 

nothing thence but sweetness " 93 12 

Thence comes it that my name " 111 5 

And almost thence my nature " 111 6 

But thence I learn " 118 13 

And thence this slander " 131 14 

would not break from thence L C 34 

and did thence remove " 237 

There— There thy beauty lies VA 119 

where there are but twain " 123 

if there he came to lie " 245 

There Love lived, and there he " 246 

and there he stares " 301 

and left Adonis there " 322 

For there his smell " 691 

false sound enter there " 780 

There lives a son " 863 

And there another " 915 

And there all smother'd up in shade " 1035 



There — to persuade him there VA 1114 

There shall not be " lis? 

for his being there RL 114 

there's no death supposed " 133 

there is such thwarting strife " 143 

if there be no self-trust " 158 

there is no hate " 240 

shriek to see him there " 307 

Even there he starts " 348 

there were no strife " 405 

yet, winking, there appears " 458 

And, lo, there falls " 653 

For there it revels " 713 

lies panting there " 737 

She there remains " 744 

Let there bechance him _ " 976 

and there we will unfold " 1146 

and there she stay'd " 1275 

lamentable objects there " 1373 

There might you see " 1380 

there would appear " 1382 

And here and there " 1390 

There pleading might you see " 1401 

imaginary work was there " 1422 

plead for justice there " 1649 

and confounds him there Son 5 6 
Nor draw no lines there " 19 10 
And there reigns love " 31 3 
there is but one respect " 36 5 
in their riot even there " 41 11 
If there be nothing new " 59 1 
there is no remedy " 62 3 
There lives more life " 83 13 
For there can live no hatred " 93 5 
have any wrinkle graven there " 100 10 
and there appears a face " 103 6 
conceit of love there bred " 108 13 
I have gone here and there " 110 1 
ere that there was true needing " 118 8 
is there more delight " 130 7 
And will, thy soul knows, is ad- 
mitted there " 136 3 
there's no more dying tlien " 146 14 
There is such strength " 150 7 
Came there for cure " 154 13 

there may be aught applied L C 68 

Many there were that did " 134 

Even there resolved my reason " 290 

There my white stole " 297 

she touch'd him here and there P P 4 7 

that often there had been "68 

There a nay is placed " 18 12 

I see that there is none " 18 54 

and chiefly there " 19 26 

There is no heaven " 19 45 

There will we sit upon tlie rocks " 20 5 

There will I make thee " 20 9 

A nd there sung the dolefull'st ditty " 21 11 

Number there in love was slain P T 28 

Thereby— That beauty's rose Son 1 2 

her seal, and meant thereby " 11 13 

Therefore— Therefore no marvel VA 390 

And therefore hath she " 733 

Therefore, despite of " 751 

Therefore, in sadness " 807 

And therefore would he " 1087 

Therefore that praise R L 82 

Who, therefore angry, " 383 

And therefore would they still " 752 



THEREFORE 



302 



THEY 



■ni»refore— now I need not fear R L 1052 

And therefore still in night " 3085 

And therefore are they form'd " 1241 

And therefore Lucrece swears " 1452 

O therefore, love, be of thyself Son 22 9 
and therefore to be won '' 41 5 

therefore to be assailed " 41 6 

Therefore desire, of perfect'st love " 51 10 
Thereforr are feasts " 52 5 

And therefore niayst without attaint'' 82 2 
And therefore art enforced " 82 7 

And therefore to your fair " 83 2 

And therefore have I slept " 83 5 

Therefore in that I cannot " 93 6 

Therefore, like her, I sometime " 102 13 
Therefore my verse to constancy 

confined " 105 7 

Therefore to give them " 122 11 

and therefore we admire " 123 5 

Therefore my mistress' eyes " 127 9 

Therefore I lie with her " 138 13 

therefore from my face " 139 11 

Therefore I'll lie with love P P 1 13 

Therein — And therein heartens up It L 295 

And therein so ensconced " 1515 

to gaze therein on thee Son 24 12 

and therein dignified " 101 4 

and therein show'st " 126 3 

Thereof— not .... make discovery R L 1314 

And in the praise thereof Son 80 3 
the loss thereof still fearing P P 1 10 
and thereof free L C 100 

Thereon — shall thereon fall and die R L 1139 

These — These blue-vein'd violets VA 125 

These forceless flowers " 152 

These lovely caves, these round 

enchanting pits " 247 

And these mine eyes " 503 

Would root these beauties " 636 

Pursue these fearful creatures " 677 

of all these nialadies " 745 

she at these sad signs " 929 

and beats these from the stage R L 278 

these poor forbidilings could not " 823 

these lets attend the time " 330 

These worlds in Tarquin new am- 
bition bred " 411 

blow these pitchy vapours " 550 

If all these petty ills shall change " 656 

So shall these slaves be king " 659 

These means, as frets upon an in- 
strument " 1140 

these pretty creatures stand " 1233 

These manj' lives confound " 1489 

These contraries such unity do hold " 1558 

These water-galls in her dim ele- 
ment " 1588 

will sufl'er these abominations " 1832 

Yet in these thoughts Son 29 9 

These poor rude lines " 32 4 

Or any of these all " 37 6 

do please these curious days " 38 13 

These present-absent with swift 

motion glide " 45 4 

when these quicker elements are 

gone " 45 5 

more bright in these contents " 55 3 

in these black lines be seen " 63 13 

Tired with all these " 66 1 



These — Tired with all these, from 

these would I Son 66 13 

before these last so bad " 67 14 

Before these bastard signs " 68 3 

Commit to these waste blanks " 77 10 

These ofiices, so oft as thou wilt look " 77 13 

But these particulars are not " 91 7 

All these I better " 91 8 

I with these did play " 98 14 

behold these present days " 106 13 

These blenches gave my heart " 110 7 

these rebel powers that thee array " 146 '2 

L C 50 

" 176 

" 204 

" 218 

" 223 

" 227 

" 274 

PP 9 10 

" 20 15 



These often bathed she 

And long upon these terms 

these talents of their hair 

Lo, all these trophies 

For these, of force, must your 

Take all these similes 

Now all these hearts 

Here in these brakes 

if these pleasures maiy thee move 

These pretty pleasures might me 

move " 20 19 

These are certain signs " 21 57 

For these dead birds sigh P T 67 

They— So they were dew'd VA 66 

yet are they red " 116 

For, where they lay " 176 

when they blot the sky " 184 

If they burn too " 192 

fly they know not whether " 304 

As they were mad, unto the wood 

they hie them " 323 

as they had not seen them " 357 

They wither in their prime " 418 

they make no battery " 426 

Would they not wish " 447 

they borrow'd all their shine " 488 

That they have murder'd " 502 

Long may they kiss " 505 

And as they last " 507 

Are they not quickly told " 520 

Incorporate then they seem " 540 

Whereon they surfeit " 544 

They that thrive well " 640 

till they have singled " 693 

they spend their mouths " 695 

others, they think, delight " 843 

they answer all "Tis so " 851 

. They all strain courtesy " 888 

They basely fly " 894 

that they are afraid " 898 

bleeding as they go " 924 

they long have gazed " 927 

They bid thee crop " 946 

they view'd each other's sorrow " 963 

then join they all together " 971 

Where they resign " 1039 

they have wept till now " 1062 

They both would strive " 1092 

they him with berries " 1104 

and they are' pale " 1123 

As if they heard " 1125 

wherein they late escell'd " 1131 

They that love best " 1164 

That oft they interchange B L 70 

what they have not, that which 

they possess " 135 

They scatter and unloose it " 136 



THEY 



303 



THIEF 



They— they have but less B L 137 

That they prove bankrupt " 140 

that they may surprise " 166 

tribute than they owe " 299 

But, as they open, they all rate his 

ill " 304 

They fright him " 308 

And they would stand " 347 

How can they then assist " 350 

But blind they are " 378 

O, had they in that darksome 

prison " 379 

Then had they seen " 380 

But they must ope " 383 

Till they might open " 399 

no bearing yoke they knew " 409 

by oath they truly honoured " 410 

And they, like straggling slaves " 428 

They, mustering to the quiet " 442 

When they in thee " 613 

partially they smother " 634 

how are they wrapp'd in " 636 

they basely dignified " 660 

they thy fouler grave " 661 

they in thy pride " 662 

by nature they delight " 697 

They think not " 750 

■which they themselves behold " 751 

would they still iu darkness be " 752 

For they their guilt " 754 

and they too strong " 865 

they ne'er meet with Opportunity " 903 

Tliey buy thy help " 913 

hide thera when they list " 1008 

wheresoe'er they fly " 1014 

They that lose half " 1158 

Than they whose whole " 1159 

And then they drown their eyes " 1239 

are they form'd as marble will " 1241 

that they are so fulfill'd " 1258 

But they whose guilt " 1342 

ssueh signs of rage they bear " 1419 

It seem'd they would debate " 1421 

they such odd action yield " 1433 

the strand of Dardan where they 

fought " 1436 

They join and shoot their foam " 1442 

wherein they view'd tlieir faces " 1526 

And they that watch see time " 1575 

they all at once began to say " 1709 

and they none of ours " 1757 

If they surcease to be " 1766 

possess the claim they lay " 1794 

That they will suffer " 1832 

their knees they bow " 1846 

and that they swore " 1848 

When they had sworn " 1849 

They did conclude to bear " 1850 

they with winter meet Son 5 13 

They do but sweetly "87 

as they see others " 12 12 

They draw but what they see " 24 14 

they in their glory die " 25 8 

And thou, all they, hast all " 31 14 

And though they be " 32 6 

And they are rich " 34 14 

they view things unrespected " 43 2 

they look on thee " 43 3 

and they with thee " 47 12 



They — Or, if they sleep Son 47 13 

they thinly placed are " 52 7 

They live unwoo'd " 54 10 

they wink with fullness " 56 6 

that, when they see " 56 11 

mended, or whether better they " 59 11 

And thpy shall live " 63 14 

They look into the beauty " 69 9 

they measure by thy deeds " 69 10 

where they did proceed " 76 8 

when they have devised " 82 9 

wherein they grew " 86 4 

they most do show " 94 2 

They rightly do inherit " 94 5 

They are the lords " 94 7 

Or, if they sing " 97 13 

pluck tbena where they grew " 98 8 

They were but sweet " 98 11 

And, for they look'd " 106 11 

They had not skill " 106 12 

and they that level " 121 9 

they themselves be bevel " 121 11 

evil they maintain " 121 13 

They are but dressings " 123 4 

and they mourners seem " 127 10 

Yet so they mourn " 127 13 

they would change their state " 128 9 

To say they err " 131 7 

and they, as pitying me " 132 1 

And all they foul " 132 14 
That they behold, and see not 

what they see " 137 2 

They know what beauty is " 137 3 

are they now transferred " 137 14 

That they elsewhere " 139 12 

For they in thee " 141 2 

loves what they despise " 141 3 

Or, if they have " 148 3 

what they see aright " 148 4 

against the thing they see " 152 12 

As they did battery to the spheres L C 23 

sometimes they do extend " 25 

observed as they flew " 60 

unruly though they be " 103 

which abroad they find " 137 

with acture they may be " 185 

They sought their shame " 187 

they their passions likewise lent " 199 

when they to assail begun " 262 

with bleeding groans they pine " 275 

As they must needs P P 8 2 

they cannot hear thee " 21 21 

they will not cheer thee " 21 22 

Bountiful they will him call " 21 40 

Quickly him they will entice " 21 44 

They have at commandment " 21 46 

They that fawn'd on him " 21 49 

So they lived, as love in twain P T 25 

Thick— Thin mane, thick tail VA 298 

His short thick neck " 627 

misty vapours march so thick R L 782 

so thick come in his poor heart's 

aid " 1784 

Thick-sighted— Thick-sighted, bar- 
ren VA 136 

Thief— hemra'd with thieves " ...... 1022 

Lurk'd like two thieves " 1086 

drives the creeping thief R L 305 

And Lust, the thief, far poorer " 693 



THIEF 



304 



THING 



Tliief— tliou traitor, thou false .... R L . 

let the thief run mad " . 

To that sweet thief Son 

thy robbery, gentle thief " 

the pre}' of every vulgar thief " 

Sweet thief, whence didst thou steal " 
Thievish — From thievish ears R L . 

He like a thievish dog " 

For truth, proves thievish Son 

Time's thievish progress " 

Thigh — twine about her thigh VA 

Deep in the thigh PP 

'See, in my thigh,' quoth she " 

Thin — Thin mane, thick tail VA 

Thin winding breath R L 

Thine — those fair lips of thine V A 

The kiss shall be thine own 

I will enchant thine ear 

thine own heart to thine own face 

Steal thine own freedom 

That thine may live 

Thine eye darts forth 

in thine own law forlorn 

all whole as thine 

that hard heart of thine 

that face of thine 

And so 'tis thine 

whose light excelleth thine R 

the fault is thine 

thine eyes betray thee 

some worthless slave of thine 

To kill thine honour 

for thine own sake leave me 

shame be seated in thine age 

thine honour lay in me 

accessary by thine inclination 

that are thine enemies 

for trespass of thine eye 

On thee and thine 

some hard-favour'd groom of thine 

Thine, mine, his own 

thine own bright eyes Son 

thine own bud 

thine own deep-sunken eyes 

by succession thine 

of thine age shalt see 

thine image dies with thee 

If ten of thine ten times 

make worms thine heir 

with pleasure thine annoy 

do offend thine ear 

live in thine or thee 

In one of thine 

Thou may St call thine 

But from thine eyes 

with thine antique pen 

doth live as thine in me 

thou gavest me thine 

glazed with thine eyes 

and thine for me 

some good conceit of thine 

now is thine alone 

Thine own sweet argument 

but thine shall be the praise 

All mine was thine 

Thine by thy beauty 

is thine outward part 

thine inward love of heart 

■with that sun thine eye 



997 

14 

9 

8 

2 

35 

736 

14 



.. 873 

9 11 

9 12 

.. 298 

.. 1407 

.. 115 

.. 117 

.. 145 

.. 157 

.. 160 

.. 172 

.. 196 

.. 251 

.. 370 

.. 500 

.. 631 

.. 1181 

,. 191 

,. 482 

,. 483 

,. 515 

.. 516 

.. 583 

. 603 

.. 834 

.. 922 

.. 1470 

.. 1476 

.. 1630 

.. 1632 

.. 1684 

1 5 



8 


6 


10 


14 


11 


2 


11 


4 


14 


9 


19 


10 


22 


7 


22 


14 


24 


8 


24 


10 


26 


7 


31 


12 


38 


3 


38 


14 


40 


4 


41 


14 


46 


13 


46 


14 


49 


6 



Thine — give thee so thine own 
My spirit is thine 
Thine eyes, that taught 
is thine and born of thee 
upon that love of thine 
no hatred in thine eye 
thou mine, I thine 
Thine eyes I love 
Perforce am thine 
confess'd that he is thine 
to hide my will in thine 
Wound me not with thine eye 
■ to glance thine eye 
Bear thine eyes straight 
compare thou thine own state 
from those lips of thine 
Whom thine eyes woo 
the motion of thine eyes 
all things else are thine 
the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye 
makes his book thine eyes 
Thine eye Jove's lightning seems 
When as thine ej'e hath chose 

Thingr — Things growing to them- 
selves 
Thing like a man 
If springing things 
Things out of hope 
in hand with all things 
of all mortal things 
Of things long since, or any thinj 

ensuing 
envy of so rich a thing 
The things we are 
The thing we have 
if I gain the thing I seek 
accidental things of trial 
income of each precious thing 
the blessed thing he sought 
fearing no such thing 
Mar not the thing 
should govern every thing 
no outrageous thing 
The lesser thing should not 
a dearer thing than life 
the seal of time in aged things 
with decay of things 
the mightier is the thing 
with every thing she sees 
with each thing she views 
Like bright things stain'd 
and uttering foolish things 
every thing that grows 
By adding one thing 
and all things rare 
Or some fierce thing replete 
remembrance of things past 
many a thing I sought 
But things removed, that hidden 
they view things unrespected 
converted from the thing 
Though you do any thing 
to love things nothing worth 
That do not do the thing 
sweetest things turn sourest 
And all things turn to fair 
and for true things deem'd 
a spirit of youth in every thing 
One thing expressing 



Son 69 



" 74 


8 


" 78 


5 


" 78 


10 


" 92 


4 


" 93 


5 


" 108 


7 


" 132 


1 


" 133 


14 


" 134 


1 


" 185 


6 


" 139 


3 


" 139 


6 


" 140 


14 


" 142 


3 


" 142 


5 


" 142 


10 


" 149 


12 


LC 


266 


PP 3 


1 


5 


5 


" 5 


11 


" 19 


1 


VA 


166 


" 


214 


" 


417 


" 


567 


" 


912 


" 


996 


.' 


1078 


RL 


39 


" 


149 


" 


153 


" 


211 


" 


326 


" 


334 


" 


340 


" 


363 


" 


578 


" 


602 


" 


607 


" 


G63 


" 


*687 


" 


941 


" 


947 


" 


1004 


" 


1093 


" 


1101 


" 


1435 


" 


1813 


Son 15 


1 


" 20 


12 


" 21 


7 


" 23 


3 


" 30 


2 


" 30 


3 


'^ 31 


8 


" 43 


2 


" 49 


7 


" 57 


14 


" 72 


14 


" 94 


2 


" 94 


13 


" 95 


12 


" 96 


8 


" 98 


3 


" 105 


8 



THING 



305 



THIS 



Thini^ — dreaming on things to comeSon 107 2 

Counting no old thing new " 108 7 

monsters and things indigest " 114 5 

to the course of altering things " 115 8 

In things of great receijit " 136 7 

In things right true " 137 13 

In pursuit of the thing " 143 4 

this becoming of things ill " 150 5 

against the thing they see " 152 12 

The thing we have not L C 240 

and ail things else are thine " 266 

Against the thing he sought " 313 

rule things worthy blame PP 19 3 

Every thing did banish moan " 21 7 

Think — think it heavy unto thee V A 156 

did think to reprehend her " 470 

others, they think, delight " 843 

She thinks he could not " 1060 

Now thinks lie that her husband Jt L 78 

When shall he think ■ " 159 

That thinks she hath beheld " 451 

I think the honey guarded " 493 

Think but how vile a spectacle " 631 

They think not but that every eye " 750 

and think no shame of me " 1204 

But long she thinks " 1359 

And both she thinks too long " 1572 

To think their dolour " 1582 

Haply I think on thee Srni 29 10 

I think on thee, dear friend " 30 13 

As soon as think the place " 44 8 

Nor think the bitterness " 57 7 

stay and think of nought " 57 11 

he thinks no ill " 57 14 

I think good thoughts " 85 5 

that I will bitter think " 111 11 

.count bad what I think good " 121 8 

Than think that we " 123 8 

I think my love as rare " 130 13 

as I think, proceeds " 131 14 

Think all but one " 135 14 

think that a several plot " 137 9 

That she might think me " 138 3 

tliat she thinks me young " 138 5 

Do I not think on thee " 149 3 

might think sometime it saw L C 10 

thinks in Paradise was sawn " 91 

That she might think me PP 1 3 

that she thinks me young ''15 

Think women still to strive " 19 43 

Made me think upon mine own " 21 18 

Tliinkiiig — If thinking on me then Son 71 8 

but thinking on thy face " 131 10 

Thus vainly thinking " 138 5 

Thus vainly thinking ■ P P 1 5 

Thinly— they thinly placed are Son 52 7 

Third — A third, nor red nor white " 99 10 

Thirst— More thirst for drink V A 92 

Thirsty — her thirsty lips well knew " 543 

This— wilt deign this favour " 15 

With this she seizeth " 25 

pay this countless debt " 84 

Upon this promise " 85 

for tliis good turn " 92 

this primrose bank " 151 

By this the love-sick queen " 175 

of this descending sun " 190 

Between this heavenly and earthly 

sun " 198 

20 



This — shouldst contemn me this V A 205 

This said, impatience " 217 

of this ivory pale " 230 

Within this limit " 235 

At this Adonis smiles " 241 

And this I do " 281 

So did this horse excel " 293 

And all this dumb play " 359 

This beauteous combat " 365 

on this mortal round " 368 

this idle theme, this bootless chat " 422 

This ill presage " 457 

What hour is this " 495 

this poor heart of mine " 502 

kiss each other for this cure " 505 

this night I'll waste " 583 

sweet boy, ere this " 613 

This sour informer, this bate- 
breeding spy " 655 

This canker that eats " 656 

This carry-tale, dissentious " 657 

By this, poor Wat " 697 

Applying this to that " 713 

0, then imagine this " 721 

Now of this dark night " 727 

For, by this black-faced night " 773 

With this, he breaketh " 811 

with this fair good-morrow " 859 

This said, she hasteth " 865 

By this she hears " 877 

This dismal cry rings " 889 

This way she runs " 905 

curse thee for this stroke " 945 

By this, far off " 973 

This sound of hope " 976 

Even at this word " 1025 

This mutiny each part " 1049 

This solemn sympathy " 1057 

this foul, grim, and urchin-snouted 

boar " 1105 

With this, she falleth " 1121 

this is my spite " 1133 

By this the boy " 1165 

this was thy father's guise " 1177 

in this hollow cradle " 1185 

This bateless edge P L 9 

Suggested this proud issue " 37 

this false lord arrived " 50 

This heraldry in Lucrece' face " 64 

This silent war " 71 

This earthly saint, adored by this 

devil " 85 

in this poor-rich gain " 140 

And in this aim " 143 

And this ambitious " 150 

And now this lustful lord " 169 

'As from this cold flint I enforced 

this fire " 181 

on this arise " 186 

this vile purpose " 220 

This siege that hath " 221 

This blur to youth, this sorrow to 

to the sage " 222 

This dying virtue, this surviving 

shame " 223 

dear friend, this desire " 234 

his conduct in this case " 313 

' This glove to wanton tricks " 320 

abhor this fact " 349 



THIS 



306 



THIS 



This— This said, his guilty hand Ji L 358 

this night-owl will catch " 360 

this blessed league to kill " 383 

From this fair throne " 413 

So o'er this sleeping soul " 423 

which late this mutiny " 426 

this tumult to behold " 447 

This moves in him " 468 

enter this sweet city " 469 

this rash alarm to know " 473 

he commits this ill " 476 

to this night " 485 

All this beforehand " 494 

This said, he shakes aloft " 505 

' this night I must enjoy " 512 

at this disdain " 521 

by this dividing " 551 

'This deed will make thee " 610 

If but for fear of this " 614 

This guilt would seem " 635 

the higher by this let " 646 

in this shameful doom " 672 

This said, he sets " 673 

This forced league " 689 

This momentary joy " 690 

This hot desire " 691 

Tarquin fares this night " 698 

with this faultful lord " 715 

Who this accomplishment " 716 

he sounds this doom " 717 

Even in this thought " 729 

from this attaint of mine " 825 

As I, ere this " 826 

O, this dread night " 965 

I could prevent this storm " 966 

this cursed, crimeful night " 970 

thou taught'st this ill " 996 

This helpless smoke of words " 1027 

at this decree " 1030 

to rid me of this shame " 1031 

This said, from her " 1037 

But this no slaughterhouse " 1039 

To clear this spot " 1053 

This bastard graff " 1062 

this false night's abuses " 1075 

By this, lamenting Philomel " 1079 

If in this blemish'd fort " 1175 

convey this troubled soul " 1176 

' This brief abridgement " 1198 

shall oversee this will " 1205 

This plot of death " 1212 

By this, mild patience " 1268 

This is too curious-good, this 

blunt and ill " 1300 

By this short schedule " 1312 

To shun this blot " 1322 

Even so this pattern " 1350 

in this work was had " 1385 

To this well-painted piece ' " 1443 

On this sad shadow " 1457 

that began this stir " 1471 

This load of wrath " 1474 

this mild image drew " 1520 

This picture she advisedly perused " 1527 

with this gives o'er " 1567 

Which all this time " 1576 

this moody heaviness " 1602 

And now this pale swan " 1611 

Then be this all " 1618 



This— this night I will inflict R L 1630 

this act will be " 1637 

' With this, I did begin " 1639 

this refuge let me find " 1654 

stain'd with this abuse " 1655 

merchant of this loss " 1660 

this wrong of mine " ■ 1691 

At this request " 1695 

' How may this forced stain " 1701 

acquit me from this chance " 1706 

from this compelled stain " 1708 

With this, they all " 1709 

She utters this " 1721 

That guides this hand to give this 

wound to me " 1722 

with this deadly deed " 1730 

in this fearful flood " 1741 

wast not to this end " 1755 

By this starts Collatine " 1772 

This windy tempest " 1788 

And by this chaste blood " 1836 

by this bloody knife " 1840 

the death of this true wife " 1841 

This said, he struck his hand " 1842 

sworn to this advised doom " 1849 

or else this glutton be Son 1 13 

'This fair child of mine " 2 10 

This were to be new-made " 2 13 

this thy golden time " 3 12 

Sings this to thee " 8 14 

Without this, folly " 11 6 

Against this coming end " 13 3 

this I prognosticate " 14 13 

That this huge stage " 15 3 

of this inconstant stay " 15 9 

war upon this bloody tyrant " 16 2 

Which this, Time's pencil " 16 10 

'This poet lies " 17 7 
So long lives this, and this gives 

life to thee " 18 14 

this huge rondure hems " 21 8 

Yet eyes this cunning " 24 13 

this written ambassage " 26 3 

Desiring this man's art " 29 7 

but this loving thought " 32 9 

with this growing age " 32 10 

A dearer birth than this " 32 11 

with this disgrace " 33 8 

, Yet him for this my love " 33 13 

and even I in this " 35 5 

engrafted to this store " 37 8 

Whilst that this shadow " 37 10 

This wish I have " 37 14 

Even for this " 39 5 

That by this separation " 39 7 

thou hadst this more " 40 4 

lay on me this cross " 42 12 

This told, I joy " 45 18 

To 'cide this title " 46 9 

And this my hand " 49 11 

put this in my mind " 50 13 

this powerful rhyme " 55 2 

That wear this world out " 55 12 

You live in this " 55 14 

Let this sad interim " 56 9 

To this composed " 59 10 

And for this sin " 62 3 

This thought is as a death " 64 13 

How with this rage " 65 3 



THIS 



307 



THOSE 



riiis— O, none, unless this miracle Son 
do this praise confound 
The soil is this 
Yet this tliy praise 
From this vile world 
Nay, if you read this line 
you look upon this verse 
may seem false in this 
This thou perceivest 
in this line some interest 
When thou reviewest this 
Aud that is this, aud this with thee 
And of this book this learning 
The worst was this 
breathers of this world 
This silence for my sin 
Thau this rich praise 
The cause of this fair gift 
And I by this will be 
hath 'scaped this sorrow 
Wretched in this alone 
All this away 
of this large privilege 
And yet this time 
Yet this abundant issue 
For fear of which, hear this 
And in this change 
Of this our time 
of this most balmy time 
live in this poor rhym« 
And thou in this shalt find 
this wide universe I call 
monarch's plague, this flattery 
taught it this alchemy 
If this be error 
of this madding fever 
Unless this general evil 
This I do vow and this shall ever be 
To this I witness 
She keeps thee to this 
so happy are in this 
All this the world 
leads men to this hell 
And thence this slander 
seeing this, say this is not 
And to this false plague 
Now this ill-wresting world 
Y''et this shall I ne'er 
inheritors of this excess 
is this thy body's end 
hast thoa this powerful might 
this becoming of things ill 
Proud of this pride 
this advantage found 
this holy fire of Love 
This brand she quenched 
and this by that I prove 
this double voice accorded L C 

This said, in top of rage 
Towards this afflicted fancy 
But quickly on this side 
Of this false jewel 
"This man's untrue 
Lo, this device was sent me 
This said, his watery eyes 
our drops this difference bore 
to this false perjury 
that on this earth doth shine 
Exhale this vapour vow 



65 


13 


69 


7 


69 


14 


70 


11 


71 


4 


71 


5 


71 


9 


72 


9 


73 


13 


74 


3 


74 


5 


74 


14 


77 


4 


80 


14 


81 


12 


83 


9 


84 


2 


87 


7 


88 


9 


90 


5 


91 


13 


91 


14 


95 


13 


97 


5 


97 


9 


104 


13 


105 


11 


106 


10 


107 


9 


107 


11 


107 


13 


109 


13 


114 


2 


114 


4 


116 


13 


119 


8 


121 


13 


123 


13 


124 


12 


126 


7 


128 


13 


129 


13 


129 


14 


131 


14 


137 


11 


137 


14 


140 


11 


144 


13 


146 


7 


146 


8 


150 


1 


150 


5 


151 


10 


153 


2 


153 


5 


154 


9 


154 


13 




3 




55 




61 




113 




154 




169 




232 




281 




300 


3 


3 


3 


10 


3 


11 



This — as this queen on him 

Was this a lover 

my lady at this bay 

Causer of this 

To this troop come thou not near 

From this session interdict 

Seemeth this concordant one 

Whereupon it made this threne 

To this urn let those repair 
Thither — And thither hied 

to make me wander thither 
Tlioiig — Throwing the base thong 
Thorn — I know what tliorns 

against a thorn tliou bear'st 

Eoses have thorns 

Hang on such thorns 

on thorns did stand 

Ne'er to pluck thee from thy thorn 

Lean'd her breast up-till a thorn 
Thorny— The thorny brambles 
Tlioroiigli — her bleeding body thor- 
ough Rome 
Those— those fair lips of thine 

if those hills be dry 

Love made those hollows 

As those poor birds 

Of those fair arms 

Those eyes that taught 

if none of those 

To those two armies 

Those that much covet 

Or as those bars 

For those thine eyes betray thee 

To those that live 

Of those fair suns 

those proud lords to blame 

Those tears from thee 

those far-oflf eyes look sad 

that those shrunk pipes have fed 

no god to lend her those 

To see those borrow'd tears 

Those round clear pearls 

to those already spent 

Speaking to those that came 

lends to those are free ■ 

Those hours that with gentle 

■Which happies those that pay 

Let those whom Nature 

As those gold candles 

Let those who are 

And all those fi-iends 

Ah, but those tears 

So shall those blots 

Than those old nine 

Those pretty wrongs 

By those swift messengers 

how happy you make those 

And all tliose beauties 

In him those holy antique 

Those parts of thee 

But those same tongues 

Upon those boughs 

Those children nursed 

have those vices got 

So are those errors 

you pattern of all those 

Those lines that I before 

Even those that said 

To trust those tables 



pp 


6 


12 


" 


7 


17 


" 


11 


13 


" 


18 


8 


PT 




8 
9 
46 
49 
65 


Son 153 


12 


PP 


14 


10 


VA 




395 


RL 




492 
1135 


Son 


35 


2 


" 


54 


7 


" 


99 


8 


\PP 


17 


12 


" 


21 


10 


VA 




629 


RL 




1851 


VA 




115 
233 
243 
604 
812 
952 


RL 




44 
76 
134 
327 
483 
1204 
1230 
1259 
1271 
1386 
1455 
1461 
1549 
1553 
1589 
1689 


Son 


4 


4 




5 


1 




6 


6 




11 


9 




21 


12 




25 


1 




31 


4 




34 


13 




36 


3 




38 


10 




41 


1 




45 


10 




57 


12 




63 


6 




68 


9 




69 


1 




69 


6 




73 


3 




77 


11 




95 


9 




96 


7 




98 


12 




115 


1 




115 


2 




122 


12 



THOSE 



THOU 



Those— Do I envy those jacks Soti 128 5 

with those dancing chips " 128 10 

As those whose beauties " 131 2 

As those two mourning eyes " 132 9 

not from those lips of thine " 142 5 

as thou lovest those " 142 9 

Those lips that Love's own hand " 145 1 

Those that can see " 149 14 

those impediments stand forth L C 269 

Tliose tlioughts, to me like oalis FP 5 4 

Where all those pleasures live "56 

he should not pass those grounds "98 

To this urn let those repair P T 65 

Thou — Vouchsafe, thou wonder V A 13 

If thou wilt deign " 15 

secrets shalt thou know " 16 

If thou wilt chide " 48 

why art thou coy " 96 

thou unask'd shalt have " 102 

What see'st thou in the ground " 118 

Art thou ashamed to kiss " 121 

mayst thou well be tasted " 128 

Then mightst thou pause " 137 

Thou canst not see " 139 

That thou shouldst think " 156 

Thou wast begot " 168 

, why shouldst thou feed " 169 

thou art bound to breed " 171 

when thou thyself art dead " 172 

thou dost survive " 173 

makest thou to be gone " 188 

Art thou obdurate " 199 

Art thou a woman's son " 201 

that thou shouldst contemn me " . ... 205 

if thou wilt have twain " 210 

Thou art no man " 215 

thou shalt be my deer " 281 

]<'eed where thou wilt " 232 

thou wert as I am " 369 

' why dost thou feel it " 373 

' and thou shalt have it " 374 

What! canst thou talk?' quoth 

she, ' hast thou a tongue " 427 

O, would thou hadst not " 428 

wert thou to the taste " 445 

0, thou didst kill me " 499 

So thou wilt buy " 514 

Which purchase if thou make " 515 

wilt thou make the match " 586 

Thou hadst been gone " 613 

thou told'st me thou wouldst hunt " fil4 

thou knowst not what it is " 615 

When thou didst name the boar " 641 

'Didst thou not mark " 643 

Saw'st thou not signs " 644 

whereon thou dost lie " 646 

If thou encounter " 672 

But if thou needs wilt hunt " 673 

And when thou hast on foot " 679 

Then shalt thou see " 703 

for thou shalt not rise " 710 

thou hear'st me moralize " 712 

But if thou fall " 721 

thou needs must have " 759 

If thou destroy tliem not " 760 

O, thou clear god " 860 

as thou dost lend to other " 864 

what dost thou mean " 933 

thou shouldst strike at it " 938 



Thou — thou hast no eyes to see V A 939 

at random dost thou hit " 940 

Hadst thou but bid " 943 

thou pluck'st a flower " ...... 946 

' Dost thou drink tears, tliat thou 

provokest such weeping " 949 

Why hast thou cast " 951 

thou art so full of fear " 1021 

treasure hast thou lost " 1075 

what canst thou boast " 1077 

That, thou being dead " 1134 

'Since thou art dead " ..;.. 1135 

Thou art the next " 1184 

When thou shalt charge me R L 226 

Thou see'st our mistress " 322 

if thou mean to chide " 484 

Where thou with patience " 486 

If thou deny " 513 

And thou, the autlior " 523 

' But if thou yield " 526 

as thou hast pretended " 576 

Thou look'st not like deceit " 585 

a stone thou art " 593 

Hast thou put on " 597 

Thou wrong'st his honour " 599 

Thou art not what thou seem'st " 600 

Thou seem'st not what thou art " 601 

thou darest do such outrage " 605 

What darest thou not when once 

thou art a king " 606 

thou perforce must bear " 612 

'And wilt thou be " 617 

Wilt thou be glass " 619 

Thou back'st reproach . " 622 

'Hast thou command " 624 

how canst thou fulfil " 628 

thou didst teach the way " 630 

That thou shalt see " 644 

, ' Thou art,' quoth she " 652 

and thou their slave " 659 

Thou nobly base " 660 

Thou their fair life " 661 

Thou loathed in their shame " 662 

Since thou art guilty " 772 

Or if thou wilt " 775 

'O Night, thou furnace " 799 

'Tis thou that executest " 877 

Thou set'st the wolf " 878 

thou point'st the season " 879 

'Tis thou that spurn'st at right " 880 

Thou makest the vestal " 883 

Thou blow'st the fire " 884 

Thou sraother'st honesty, thou 

murder'st troth " 885 

Thou foul abettor ! thou notorious 

bawd " 886 

Thou plantest scandal " 887 

Thou ravisher, thou traitor, thou 

false thief " 888 

'When wilt thou be " 897 

When wilt thou sort " 899 

Thou grant'st no time " 908 

thou art well appaid " 914 

'Guilty thou art " 918 

Thou nursest all " 929 

the hours thou gavest me " 933 

' Why work'st thou mischief " 960 

Unless thou couldst return " 961 

wouldst thou one-hour come back " 965 



THOU 



309 



THOU 



Thou— ' Thou ceaseless lackey RL 967 

'O Time, thou tutor " 995 

thou taught'st this ill " 996 

■why quiver'st tliou " 1030 

thou livest in my defame " 1033 

Since thou couldst not " 103-1 

thou shalt not know " 1058 

That thou art " 1064 

But thou Shalt know " 1067 

Why pry'st thou " 10S9 

While thou on Tereus " 1134 

thou bear'st thy part " 1135 

thou sing'st not " 1142 

thou revenged mayst be " 1194 

serve thou false Tarquin so " 1197 

do thou take " 1200 

'Thou, Collatine, shalt oversee " 1205 

that thou shalt see it " 1206 

Thou dead, both die " 1211 

If thou dost weep " 1272 

Bid thou be ready " 1292 

'Thou worthy lord " 1303 

thy Luerece thou wilt see " 1306 

Priam, why art thou old " 1550 

that thou dost trembling stand " 1599 

Why art thou thus attired " 1601 

where thou wast wont " 1621 

"Awake, thou Eoman dame " 1628 

If thou my love's desire " 1631 

"Unless thou yoke " 1633 

suppose thou dost defend me " 1684 

that thou shalt lend me " 1685 

which thou hast here deprived " 1752 

Thou wast not " 1755 

my image thou hast torn " 1762 

cease thou thy course " 1765 

' Thou wronged lord of Eome " 1818 

But thou, contracted to thine own Son \ 5 

Thou that art now "19 

If thou couldst answer " 2 10 

when thou art old " 2 13 

when thou feel'st it cold " 2 14 

tell the face thou viewest "31 

if now thou not renewest "33 

Thou dost beguile "34 

Thou art thy mother's glass "39 

So thou through windows " 3 11 

But if thou live " 3 13 

why dost thou spend "41 

wliy dost thou abuse " 4 5 

why dost thou use "47 

• Thou of thyself " 4 10 

canst thou leave " 4 12 

ere thou be distill'd "62 

treasure thou some place "63 

happier than thou art "69 

if thou shouldst depart " 6 11 

for thou art much too fair " 6 13 

So thou, thyself out-going " 7 13 

unless thou get a son " 7 14 

hear'st thou music sadly "81 
Why lovest thou that which thou 

receives! not gladly "83 

that thou shouldst bear "88 

'Thou single wilt prove none " 8 14 

That thou consumest "92 

Ah ! if thou issueless "93 
That thou no form of thee hast left "96 

thou bear'st love to any " 10 1 



Til oil — Grant, if thou wilt, thou art 

beloved of many San 

thou none lovest " 

For thou art so possess'd " 

thou stick'st not to conspire " 
As fast as thou shalt wane, so fast 

thou grow'st " 

from that which thou departest " 

which youngly thou bestow'st " 
Thou mayst call thine when thou 

from youth convertest " 

thou shouldst in bounty " 

Thou shouldst print more " 

That thou among the wastes " 

thou wouldst convert " 

Thou art more lovely " 

of that fair thou owest " 

thou wander'st in his shade " 

to time thou grow'st " 

blunt thou the lion's paws " 

seasons as thou fleet'st " 

And do whate'er thou wilt " 

Hast thou, the master-mistress " 

wert thou first created " 

youth and thou are of one date " 

be elder than thou art " 

Thou gavest me thine " 

where thou mayst prove one " 

please him thou art bright " 

thou gild'st the even " 

Thou art the grave " 

And thou, all they, hast all " 

If thou survive " 

Why didst thou promise " 
that through the cloud thou break " 

Though thou repent " 

which thou hast done " 
Nor thou with public kindness 

honour me " 

Unless thou take that honour " 

As thou being mine " 

While thou dost breathe " 

When thou thyself dost give " 

Be thou the tenth Muse " 

AVhen thou art all " 

which thou deservest " 

wouldst thou prove " 

And that thou teachest " 
What hast thou then more than 

thou hadst " 

thou mayst true love call " 

before thou hadst this more " 

thou my love receivest " 

for my love thou usest " 

if thou thyself deceivest " 

Although thou steal thee " 

follows where thou art " 

Gentle thou art " 

Beauteous thou art " 

thou mightst my seat forbear " 

Where thou art forced " 

That thou hast her " 
Thou dost love her, because thou 

know'st I love her " 
Then thou, whose shadow shadows 

doth " 

where thou dost stay " 

when thou art gone " 

that thou in him dost lie " 



10 


3 


10 


4 


10 


5 


10 


6 


11 


1 


11 


2 


11 


3 


11 


4 


11 


12 


11 


14 


12 


10 


14 


12 


18 


2 


18 


10 


18 


11 


18 


12 


19 


1 


19 


5 


19 


6 


20 


2 


20 


9 


22 


2 


22 


8 


22 


14 


26 


14 


28 


9 


28 


12 


31 


9 


81 


14 


32 


1 


34 


1 


34 


5 


34 


10 


35 


1 


36 


11 


36 


12 


36 


14 


38 


2 


38 


8 


38' 


9 


39 


2 


39 


8 


39' 


9 


39 


13 


40 


2 


40 


3 


40 


4 


40 


5 


40 


6 


40 


7 


40 


10 


41 


4 


41 


5 


41 


6 


41 


9 


41 


12 


42 


1 



43 





44 


4 


44 


10 


46 


5 



THOU 



310 



THOU 



Thon— thou not farther than my 

thoughts canst move Son 

But thou, to whom " 

Thou, best of dearest " 
thou art not, though I feel thou art " 

thou mayst come and part " 

thence thou wilt be stol'n " 

thou Shalt strangely pass " 
To leave poor me thou hast the 

strength " 

From where thou art " 
So, love, be thou ; although to-day 

thou fill " 

Dost thou desire " 

thou seud'st from thee " 

whilst thou dost wake " 

that thou dost common grow " 

That thou art blamed " 

So thou be good " 

And thou present'st " 

Thou liast pass'd " 

Then thou alone " 

thou mayst in me behold " 

In me thou see'st " 

In me thou see'st the glowing " 

This thou perceivest " 

thou must leave " 
When thou reviewest this, thou 

dost review " 

So then thou hast " 

learning mayst thou taste " 
Thou hy thy dial's shady stealth " 

and thou shalt find " 

oft as thou wilt look " 

thou dost but mend " 

But thou art all my art " 

thou thyself dost pay " 

I grant thou wert not " 

Thou art as fair " 

Thou truly fair wert truly " 

Farewell ! thou art too dear " 

thou know'st thy estimate " 

Thyself thou gavest " 

to whom thou gavest it " 

When thou shalt be " 

though thou art forsworn " 

That thou in losing me " 

Say that thou didst forsake " 

whom thou dost hate " 

hate me when thou wilt " 

If thou wilt leave me " 

that thou mayst take " 

thou art assured mine " 

Thou canst not vex me " 

Thou mayst be false " 

suj>posing thou art true " 

dost thou make the shame " 

thou thy sins inclose " 

Thou makest faults graces " 

mightst thou lead away " 

If thou wouldst use " 

As thou being mine " 
And, thou away, the very birds " 

whence didst thou steal " 

thou hast too grossly dyed " 
Where art thou, Muse, that thou 

forget'st " 

Spend'st thou thy fury " 

So thou prevent'st his scythe " 



47 


11 


48 


5 


48 


7 


48 


10 


48 


12 


48 


13 


49 


5 


49 


13 


51 


3 


58 


5 


61 


3 


61 


5 


61 


13 


69 


14 


70 


1 


70 


5 


70 


8 


70 


9 


70 


14 


73 


1 


73 


5 


73 


9 


73 


13 


73 


14 


74 


5 


74 


9 


77 


4 


77 


7 


77 


10 


77 


13 


78 


11 


78 


13 


79 


14 


82 


1 


82 


5 


82 


11 


87 


1 


87 


2 


87 


9 


87 


10 


88 


1 


88 


4 


88 


8 


89 


1 


89 


14 


90 


1 


90 


9 


91 


13 


92 


2 


92 


9 


92 


14 


93 


1 


95 


1 


95 


4 


96 


4 


96 


11 


96 


12 


95 


14 


97 


12 


99 


2 


99 


5 


100 


1 


100 


3 


100 


14 



Tlion— So dost thou too So7i 

wilt thou not haply say " 

wilt thou be dumb " 

thou age unbred " 

And thou in this shalt find " 

thou mine, I thine " 
Save thou, my rose; in it thou art 

my all " 

■ No, Time, thou shalt not " 

What thou dost foist " 

And take thou my oblation " 

thou suborn'd informer " 

thou, my lovely boy " 

As thou goest onwards " 

Yet fear her, O thou minion " 

How oft, when thou, my music " 

when thou gently sway'st " 
Thou art as tyrannous, so as thou art " 

For well thou know'st " 

Thou art the fairest " 

In nothing art thou black " 

thou harder hast engrossed " 

Thou canst not then use " 

And yet thou wilt " 

Thou wilt restore " 

But thou wilt not . " 

For thou art covetous " 
The statute of thy beauty thou wilt " 

Thou usurer, that put'st forth " 

thou hast both him and me " 

thou hast thy ' Will " 

Wilt thou, whose will is large " 

So thou, being rich " 

And then thou lovest me " 
Thou blind fool. Love, what dost 

thou " 

hast thou forged hooks " 

Tell me thou lovest elsewhere " 

What need'st thou wound " 

Be wise as thou art cruel " 

I may not be so, nor thou belied " 

compare thou thine own state " 

thou shalt find it merits not " 

as thou lovest those " 
If thou dost seek to have what 

thou dost hide " 142 13 

mayst thou be denied " 142 14 

So runn'st thou after that " 143 9 

But if thou catch " 143 11 

thou mayst have thy ' Will " 143 13 

If thou turn back " 143 14 

Why dost thou pine " 146 3 

Dost thou upon thy fading " 146 6 

Then, soul, live thou " 146 9 

So shalt thou feed on death " 146 13 

thou keep'st me blind " 148 13 

Canst thou, O cruel " 149 1 

On whom frown'st thou " 149 6 

Nay, if thou lour'st on me " 149 7 

Those that can see thou lovest " 149 14 

thou this powerful might " 150 1 

Whence hast thou this " 150 5 

thou shouldst not abhor " 150 12 

For, thou betraying me " 151 5 

In loving thee thou know'st " 152 1 

But thou art twice forsworn " 152 2 

thou register of lies L C 52 

witness dost thou bear " 53 

For thou art all " 266 



101 


4 


101 


5 


101 


9 


104 


13 


107 


13 


108 


7 


109 


14 


123 


1 


123 


6 


125 


10 


125 


13 


126 


1 


126 


6 


126 


9 


128 


1 


128 


3 


131 


1 


131 


3 


131 


4 


131 


13 


133 


6 


133 


12 


133 


13 


134 


4 


134 


5 


134 


6 


134 


9 


134 


10 


134 


1! 


135 


1 


185 


5 


135 


11 


136 


14 


137 


1 


187 


7 


189 


5 


139 


7 


140 


1 


140 


13 


142 


3 


142 


4 


142 


9 



THOU 



311 



THOUGHT 



Thou — '"When thou impressest 
When thou wilt inflame 
Thou being a goddess 
thou a heavenly love 
Then, thou fair sun 
Celestial as thou art 
Because thou lovest the one 
Thou lovest to hear 
For why thou left'st me nothin 
And yet thou left'st me more 
thou didst bequeath to me 
thou stay'st too long 
Thou for whom Jove 
that thou shouldst strike 
And when thou comest 
thou lovest her well 
thou to choose anew 
be thou not slack 
thou mourn'st in vain 
Thou and I were both 
Whilst thou hast 
If thou sorrow 
If thou wake 

But thou shrieking harbinger 
come thou not near 
And thou treble-dated crow 
thou givest and takest 
shalt thou go 

Though — though not in lust 
Though mine be not so fair 
though of a man's complexion 
though a thousand bark 
Though nothing but 
though thy horse be gone 
Though I were dumb 
Though neither eyes nor ears 
though the rose have prickles 
though seeming short 
Though weak-built hopes 
Though death be adjunct 
Yea, though I die 
though marble wear with raining 
Though men can cover crimes 
though my words are brief 
His face, though full of cares 
Though woe be heavy 
though none it ever cured 
Her eyes, though sod in tears 
Though my gross blood be stain'd 
though they with winter 
Though yet heaven knows 
though not so bright 
though enemies to cither's reign 
And though they be 
Though thou repent 
Tliough in our lives 
Which though it alter not 
Though I feel thou art 
though mounted on the wind 
Though you do any thing 
though waiting so be hell 
thy love, though much 
though my lover's life 
Though I, once gone 
Though words come hindmost 
though thou art forsworn 
though new-fangled ill 
though alter'd new 
Though to itself 



L C 


267 


" 


268 


PP 3 


6 


3 


7 


3 


10 


" 


13 


8 


4 


8 


9 


" 10 


8 


" 10 


9 


" 10 


12 


" 12 


12 


" 17 


15 


" 19 


2 


" 19 


7 


" 19 


11 


" 19 


34 


" 19 


35 


" 21 


19 


" 21 


30 


" 21 


36 


" 21 


53 


" 21 


54 


PT 


5 


" 


8 


" 


17 


" 


19 


" 


20 


VA 


42 


" 


116 


" 


215 


" 


240 


" 


372 


" 


390 


" 


406 


" 


437 


" 


574 


" 


842 


B L 


130 


" 


133 


" 


204 


' " 


560 


" 


1252 


" 


1309 


" 


1503 


" 


1574 


" 


1581 


" 


1592 


" ..... 


1655 


Son .5 


13 


" 17 


3 


" 21 


11 


" 28 


5 


" 32 


6 


" 34 


10 


" 86 


6 


" 36 


7 


" 48 


10 


" 51 


7 


" 57 


14 


" 58 


13 


" 61 


9 


" 63 


12 


" 81 


6 


" 85 


12 


" 88 


4 


" 91 


3 


" 93 


3 


" 94 


10 



Though — though more weak in 

seeming S(m 102 1 

though less the show appear " 102 2 

Though absence seem'd " 109 2 

though in my nature reign'd " 109 9' 

though rosy lips and cheeks " 116 9 

though they themselves be bevel " 121 11 

Her audit, though delay'd " 126 11 

Though in thy stores' account " 136 10 

though I know she lies " 138 2 

Though not to love " 140 6 

though thy proud lieart " 140 14 

though I mistake my view " 148 11 

O, though I love what others " 150 11 

Though slackly braided Z C 35 

though in me you behold " 71 

unruly though they be " 103 

Though Reason weep, and cry " 168 

though our drops this ditference 

bore " 300 

though I know she lies P P 1 2 

Though to myself forsworn "53 

though excellent in neither " 7 18 

What though her frowning brows " 19 13 

What though she strive " 19 19 

though she put thee back " 19 36 

Thought— of her thoughts began VA ..... 367 

my thought, my busy care " 383 

Whose vulture thought " 551 

The thought of it " 669 

in thoughts unlikely " 989 

In likely thoughts " 990 

His high-pitch'd thoughts P L 41 

But some untimely thought " 43 

For unstain'd thoughts " 87 

pure thoughts are dead and still " 167 

controls his thoughts unjust " 189 

And die, unhallow'd thoughts " ... . 192 
with good thoughts makes dis- 
pensation " 248 

Within his thought " 288 

from the heaven of his thought " ,3.38 

That his foul thoughts " 346 

Thoughts are but dreams " 353 

is as a thought unacted " 527 

and flattering thoughts retire " 641 

So let thy thoughts " 666 

Even in this tliought " 729 

And the dire thought " 972 

smile at thee in secret thought " 1065 

duty with thought's feathers flies " 1216 

bath overslipp'd her thought " 1576 

0, change thy thought Son 10 9 

In the soul's thought " 26 8 

For then my thoughts " 27 5 

Yet in these thoughts " 29 9 

of sweet silent thought " 30 1 

but this loving thought " 32 9 

with thoughts of love " 39 11 

Which time and thoughts " 39 12 
If the dull substance of my flesh 

were thought " 44 1 

For nimble thought " 44 7 
thought kills me, that I am not 

thought " 44 9 

The first my thought " 45 3 

A quest of thoughts " 46 10 

And in his thoughts " 47 8 

than my thoughts canst move " 47 11 



THOUGHT 



312 



THROUGH 



Thouifht — with my jealous thought Son 57 9 

I should in thought " 58 2 

This thought is as a death " 64 13 

the thought of hearts cau mend " 69 2 

Then, churls, their thoughts " 69 11 

in your sweet thoughts " 71 7 

So are you to my thoughts " 75 1 

I think good thoughts " 85 5 

But that is in my thought " 85 11 

Me for my dumb thoughts " 85 14 

That did my ripe thoughts " 86 3 

loving thoughts on thee " 88 10 

Whate'er thy thoughts " 93 11 

Gored mine own thoughts " 110 3 

their rank thoughts my deeds " 121 12 

My thoughts and my discourse " 147 11 

Whereon the thought L C 10 

To dwell with him in thoughts " 129 

theirs in thought assigu'd " 138 

Those thoughts, to me like oaks PP 5 4 

27iOM£r/ti;— He thought to kiss him VA 1110 

thought to persuade him " 1114 

Lucrece thought he blush'd RL 1344 

She thought he blush'd " 1354 

The more she thought " 1358 

which I thought buried Soji 81 4 

I found, or thought I found " 83 3 

it hath thought itself so blessed " 119 G 

and thought thee bright " 147 13 
Thought characters and words 

merely but art L C 174 

Ah, thought I, thou mourn'st PP 21 19 

Thouglited— Sick-thoughted Venus 

makes amain VA 5 

And holy-thoughted Lucrece R L 384 

Thousand — A .... honey secrets V A 16 

though a thousand bark " 240 

a thousand ways he seeks " 477 

A thousand kisses " .. .. 517 

with a thousand doubles " 682 

twenty thousand tongues " 775 

A thousand spleens bear her a 

thousand ways " 907 

A thousand times " lloO 

confounded in a thousand fears R L 456 

A thousand crosses keep them " 912 

A thousand thousand friends " 963 

a thousand lamentable objects " 1373 

After a thousand victories Svn 25 10 

A thousand groans " 131 10 

A thousand errors note " 141 2 

A thousand favours from a maund L C 36 

Like a thousand vanquish'd men PP 18 36 

With a thousand fragrant posies " 20 10 

Thrall — makes young men thrall V A 837 

and made her thrall R L 725 

but I my mistress' thrall Son 154 12 

Living in thrall PP 18 22 

Thralled— blow of discontent Son 124 7 

Threads— Her hair like golden RL 400 

Threaden— Some in her fillet L C 33 

Threat— ever threat his foes V A 620 

that sometime threat the spring R L 331 

threats if he mounts he dies " 508 

the world doth threat " 547 

Threateninsir— thy rocky and wreck- 
threatening heart " 590 

Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion " 1370 

Three — makes the wound seem VA 1064 



Three— Three times with sighs E L 1604 

Three winters cold Son 104 3 

shook three summers' pride " 104 4 

Three beauteous springs " 104 5 

Three April perfumes in three hot 

Junes burn'd " 104 7 

Three themes in one " 105 12 

Which three till now " 105 14 

the fairest one of three P P 16 1 

Threefold— A torment thrice .... Son 133 8 

Threescore — And threescore year 

would make " 11 8 

Threne — Whereupon it made this 

threne P T 49 

Threshold— The grates the door P L 306 

Threw — threw unwilling light V A 1051 

on her self-slaughter'd body threw Pi^ 1733 

from hate away she threw Son 145 13 

she in a river threw L C 38 

Threw my affections " 146 

Thrice — 'Thrice fairer than myself T J 7 

thrice more wish'd, more rare Son 56 14 
thrice more than I have spent " 119 14 

A torment thrice threefold " 133 8 

Thriftless — all-eating shame and 

thriftless praise Soil 2 8 

Thrive— They that thrive well V A 640 

may the hetter thrive " 1011 

Love thrives not in the heart R L 270 

shall together thrive Son 14 11 

Then if he thrive " 80 13 

Thrivers — Pitiful thrivers, in their 

gazing " 125 8 

Thrlveth — that by love so thriveth VA 466 

Throbbing— My throbbing heart " 1186 

Throne — perplexed in his throne " 1043 

From this fair throne R L 413 

Throned — finger of a throned queen jSo/i 96 5 

Throng — throng her constant woe V A 967 

Throng her inventions R L 1302 

through his lips do throng " 1783 

ThronijM — Here one being throng'd " 1417 

Thronging — Which, thronging 

through her lips " 1041 

Through — peering through a wave VA 86 

draw me through the sky " 153 

through his mane and tail the 

high wind sings " 305 

through the crystal tears gave light " 491 

Yet love breaks through " 576 

through whom he rushes " 630 

through the which he goes " 683 

through the dark lawnd runs apace " 813 

Through which it enters " 890 

Through all her sinews spread " 903 

But through the flood-gates breaks " 959 

mounted, through the empty skies " 1191 

Through little vents and crannies R L 310 

That through the length of times " 718 

through the dark night he stealeth " 729 

Through Night's black bosom " 788 

Which thronging through her lips " 1041 

through every cranny spies " 1086 

Why pry'st thou through my 

window " 1089 

Through which I may convey " 1176 

Through crystal walls " 1251 

through all her body spread " 1266 

through loop-holes thrust " 1383 



THROUGH 



313 



THY 



Through— through their light joy RL 1434 

As through an arch " 1667 

through her wounds doth fly " 1728 

through his lips do tlirong " 1783 

But through his teeth " 1787 

through windows of thine age Son 3 11 

For through the painter " 24 5 

■where-through tlie sun " 24 11 
that througli the cloud thou break " 34 5 

Through heavy sleep " 43 12 

to blush through lively veins " 67 10 

through my unkind abuse " 134 12 

through lattice of seared age L C 14 

That flame through water " 287 

And falls through wind P P 10 6 

Through the velvet leaves " 17 5 

Through heartless ground " 18 35 

Throw — her yoking arms she throws V A 592 

She throws her eyes about R L 1499 

She throws forth Tarquin's name " 1717 

throws that shallow habit by " 1814 

I throw all care Son 112 9 

and throws his mantle by PP 6 9 

throw gazes to the east " 15 1 

Throwing — Throwing the base 

thong VA 395 

Throwing his mantle rudely " 170 

Thrust— she would be thrust " 41 

through loop-holes thrust R L 1383 

craft and perjury should thrust " 1517 

under truest bars to thrust Son 48 2 

anger thrusts into his hide " 50 10 

Thunder — resounds like heaven's 

thunder VA 268 

Pointing to each his thunder Son 14 6 

that forced thunder L C 325 

thy voice his dreadful thunder PP 5 11 

Thus — thus she began VA 7 

Thus he that overruled " 109 

thus my strength is tried " 280 

Thus she replies " 385 

Thus stands she " 895 

thus chides she Death " 932 

Thus hoping that Adonis " 1009 

thus was Adonis slain " 1111 

Thus weary of the world, " 1189 

Teaching them thus to use it R L 62 

thus speaks advisedly " 180 

And justly thus controls " 189 

Thus graceless holds he " 246 

desire thus madly led " 300 

Thus treason works " 361 

Thus he replies " 477 

'Thus I forestall thee " 484 

When thus thy vices bud " 604 

thus breathes she forth her spite " 762 

Thus cavils she with every thiug " 1093 

1 thus far can dispense " 1279 

At last she thus begins " 1303 

Aud turn'd it thus " 1539 

Thus ebbs and flows " 1569 

And thus begins " 1598 

thus attired in discontent " 1601 

frenzy thus awaketh " 1675 

Lo, thus by day my limbs Son 27 13 

thus I will excuse thee " 42 5 

As thus ; mine eyes' due " 46 13 

Thus far the miles " 50 4 

Thus can my love excuse " 51 1 



Tlius — thus shall excuse my jade Son 
taught me thus to ruminate " 

Thus is his cheek the map " 

Thy outward thus with outward " 
Thus do I pine " 

Thus have I had thee " 

violet thus did I chide " 

thus maketh mine untrue " 

Accuse me thus " 

Thus policy in love " 

threefold thus to be crossed " 

making addition thus " 

Thus far for love " 

Thus vainly thinking " 

thus is simple truth supprest " 

thus far I count my gain " 

taught it thus anew to greet " 

Till thus he 'gan besiege me L C 

Thus merely with the garment " 
Thus vainly thinking P P 

in love thus smother'd be " 

'Even thus,' quoth she " 

' Even thus,' quoth she " 

' Even thus,' quoth she " 

Thus art with arms contending " 
That thus dissembled " 

taught her thus to say " 

Thus of every grief in heart " 

Property was thus appalled P T 

Thwarting — there is such thwarting 
strife R L 

Thy— hath ending with thy life VA 
to alight thy steed 
this favour, for thy meed 
yet not cloy thy lips 
thy lips shall never open 
brag not of thy might 
hold up thy head 
there thy beauty lies 
upon thy tempting lip 
were it with thy hand felt 
in thy palm dissolve 
Can thy right hand seize love upon 

thy left 
to get it is thy duty 
with thy increase be fed 
In that thy likeness 
O, had thy mother 
What were thy lips 
thy heart my wound 
thy help I would assure thee 
lest thy hard heart 
' Thy palfrey, as he should 
though thy horse be gone 
' Let me excuse thy courser 
Thy mermaid's voice 
thy outward parts would move 
the stillitory of thy face 
Thy eyes' shrewd tutor 
But for thy piteous lips 
banish'd by thy breath 
Set thy seal-manual 
pay them at thy leisure 
thy spear's point can enter 
not thy soft hands 
danger by thy will 
I fear'd thy fortune 
I thy death should fear 
I prophesy thy death 



64 


11 


68 


1 


69 


5 


75 


13 


87 


13 


99 


1 


113 


14 


117 


1 


118 


9 


133 


8 


135 


4 


136 


4 


138 


5 


138 


8 


141 


13 


145 


8 




177 




316 


1 


5 


1 


14 


11 


5 


11 


7 


11 


9 


16 


13 


19 


16 


19 


22 


21 


55 




37 




143 




12 




13 




15 




19 




48 




113 




118 




119 




127 




143 




144 




158 




168 




170 




174 




203 




207 




370 




371 




375 




385 




390 




403 




429 




435 




443 




500 




504 




510 




516 




518 




626 




633 




639 




642 




660 




671 



THY 



314 



THY 



Thy — on tliy well-breath'd horse 

keep with thy hounds V A 678 

thy footing trips " 722 

so do thy lips " 724 

' What is thy body " 757 

Sith in thy pride " 762 

Thy mark is feeble age; but thy 

false dart " 9-tl 

hearing him, thy power " 94i 

for thy mortal vigour " 953 

ruin'd with thy rigour " 954 

Thy weal and woe " 987 

author of thy slander " 1006 t 

Thy coward heart " 1024 

this was thy father's guise " 1177 

' Here was thy father's bed " 1183 

and 'tis thy right " 1184 

in this hollow cradle take thy rest " 1185 

Thy hasty spring still blasts R L 49 

burn out thy light " 190 

' The colour in thy face " 477 

Thy never-conquer'd fort " 482 

Thy beauty hath ensnared " 4S5 

By thy bright beauty " 490 

For in thy bed " 514 

with thy life's decay " 516 

And in thy dead arms " 517 

So thy surviving husband " 519 

Thy kinsmen hang their heads " 521 

Thy issue blurr'd " 522 

Shalt have thy trespass " 524 

I rest thy secret friend " 526 

'Then, for thy husband and thy 

children's sake " 533 

End thy ill aim before thy shoot 

be ended " 579 

' My husband is thy friend " 582 

Beat at thy rocky and " 590 

'How will thy shame " 603 

thy vices bud before thy spring " 604 

If in thy hope " 605 

thy will remove " 614 

in thy name " 621 

command thy rebel will " 625 

Draw not thy sword " 626 

Thy princely office " 628 

When pattern'd by thy fault " 629 

To view thy present trespass " 632 

death-worthy in thy brother " 635 

thy rash relier " 639 

from thy doting eyne " 643 

That thou shalt see thy state " 644 

into thy boundless flood " 653 

the ocean of thy blood " 655 

shall change thy good " 656 

Thy sea within " 657 

in thy sea dispersed " 658 

and they thy fouler grave " 661 

they in thy pride " 662 

' So let thy thoughts, low vassals 

to thy state " 666 

To be thy partner " 672 

Muster thy mists " 773 

And let thy misty vapours " 782 

thy black all-hiding cloak " 801 

of thy gloomy place " 808 

which in thy reign are made " 804 

sepulchred in thy shade " 805 

In thy weak hive " 839 



Thy — which thy chaste bee kept JR L 840 

of thy honour's wrack " 841 

Yet for thy honour " 842 

thy guilt is great " 876 

And in thy shady cell " 881 

Thy honey turns to gall, thy joy 

to grief " 889 

Thy secret pleasure " 890 

Thy private feasting " 891 

Thy smoothing titles " 892 

Thy sugar'd tongue " 893 

Thy violent vanities " 894 

Thy heinous hours " 910 

keep them from thy aid " 912 

They buy thy help " 913 

' Why hath thy servant " 932 

with thy hours " 944 

in thy pilgrimage " 960 

shun thy wrack " 966 

defend thy loyal dame " 1034 

wrong thy true affection " 1060 

did thy stock pollute " 1063 

at thy state " 1066 

thy interest was not bought " 1067 

from forth thy gate " 1068 

leave thy peeping " 1089 

Mock with thy tickling beams " 1090 

with thy piercing light " 1091 

Make thy sad grove " 1129 

at thy languishment " 1130 

thou bear'st thy part " 1135 

To keep thy sharp woes " 1136 

shall be thy boast " 1193 

ISIyself, thy friend, will kill my- 
self, thy foe " 119G 

that down thy cheeks " 1271 

Healtti to thy person " 1305 

thy Lucrece thou wilt see " 1306 

I'll tune thy woes " 1465 

Thy heat of lust, foud Paris " 1473 

Thy eye kindled the fire " 1475 

pearls of his that move thy pity " 1553 

fire to burn thy city " 1554 

hath thy fair colour spent " 1600 

And tell thy grief " 1603 

in the interest of thy bed " 1619 

to rest thy weary head " 1621 

thy Lucrece is not free " 1624 

yoke thy liking to my will " 1633 

and thy perpetual infamy " 1638 

Dear lord, thy sorrow " 1676 

too sensible thy passion maketh " 1678 

For she that was thy Lucrece " 1682 

In thy sweet semblance " 1759 

O, from thy cheeks " 1762 

cease thou thy course " 1765 

Thy father die, and not thy father 

thee " 1771 

Now set thy long-experienced wit " 1820 

by whom thy fair wife bleeds " 1824 

Thy wretched wife mistook " 1826 

do not steep thy heart " 1828 

and help to bear thy part " 1830 

Feed'st thy light's flame Son 1 6 
Thyself thy foe, to thy sweet self "18 

buriest thy content " 1 11 

Shall besiege thy brow "21 

in thy beauty's field "22 

Thy youth's proud livery "23 



THY 



315 



THY 



Thy — where all thy beauty lies Si 

treasure of thy lusty days ' 

deserved thy beauty's use ' 

And see thy blood 

Look in thy glass 

tillage of thy husbandry 

Thou art thy mother's glass 

this thy golden time ' 

thy beauty's legacy 

thyself thy sweet self dost deceive 

Thy unused beauty 
• In thee thy summer 

thyself out-going in thy noon 

The world will be thy widow 

should be thy chief desire 

O, change thy thought 

Be, as th}' presence is 

Then of thy beauty 

Thy end is truth's 

But thy eternal summer 

O, carve not with thy hours 

in thy course untainted do allow 

Yet do thy worst, old Time, despite 
thy wrong 

thy love, and thy love's use 

Which in thy breast doth live 

Bearing thy heart 

Presume not on thy heart 

Thy beauty's form 

have drawn thy shape 

Thy merit hath my duty 

In thy soul's thought 

of thy sweet respect 

Presents thy shadow 

For thy sweet love 

Thy bosom is endeared 

of thy deceased lover 

Hiding thy bravery 

Nor can thy shame 

wliich thy love sheds 

thy trespass with compare 

salving thy amiss 

Excusing thy sins more than thy 
sins are 

For to thy sensual fault 

Thy adverse party is thy advocate 

Without thy help 

honour from thy name 

mine is thy good report 

of thy worth and truth 

Entitled in thy parts 

That I in thy abundance 

of all thy glory live 

stand against thy sight 

O, how thy worth 

Were it not thy sour leisure 

I do forgive thy robbery 

absent from thy heart 

Thy beauty and thy years 

And chide thy beauty and thy 
straying youth 

Hers, by thy beauty 

Thine, by thy beauty 

would thy shadow's form 

thy much clearer light 

thy shade shines so 

thy fair imperfect shade 

Of thy fair health 

the conquest of thy sight 



2 


5 


2 


6 


2 


9 


2 


14 


3 


1 


3 


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3 


9 


3 


12 


4 


2 


4 


10 


4 


13 


6 


2 


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9 


5 


10 


8 


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12 


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2 


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12 


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13 


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1 


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4 


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13 


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8 


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9 


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10 


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4 


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12 


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1 


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10 


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9 


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2 


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3 


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10 


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13 


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14 


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6 


43 


7 


43 


8 


43 


11 


45 


12 


46 


2 



Tliy — thy picture's sight would bar Son 

thy fair appearance lies " 

So, either by thy picture " 

thy picture in my sight " 

When as thy love hath cast " 

reasons on thy part " 

measured from thy friend " 

renew thy force " 

Thy edge should blunter be " 

Thy hungry eyes " 

Praising thy worth " 

Is it thy will thy image should keep 

open " 

Is it thy spirit " 

tenour of thy jealousy • " 

0, no 1 thy love " 

watchman ever for thy sake " 

with beauty of thy days " 
Thy outward thus with outward " 

the beauty of thy mind " 

measure by thy deeds " 

To thy fair flower " 

But why thy odour matcheth not 

thy show " 

shall not be thy defect " 

Thy worth the greater " 

this thy praise cannot be so thy 

praise " 

mask'd not thy show " 

makes thy love more strong " 

Thy glass will show thee how thy 

beauties wear " 
Thy dial how thy precious minutes " 

thy mind's imprint " 

thy glass will truly show " 

Thou by thy dial's " 
what thy memory cannot contain " 

deliver'd from thy brain " 

acquaintance of thy mind " 

and much enrich thy book " 

thy sweet graces graced be " 

did call upon thy aid " 

had all thy gentle grace " 

thy lovely argument - " 

thy poet doth invent " 

From thy behaviour " 

And found it in thy cheek " 

Finding thy worth " 

by thy true-telling friend " 

know'st thy estimate " 

The charter of thy worth " 

but by thy granting " 
thy own worth then not knowing " 

So thy great gift " 

Upon thy side against myself " 

Upon thy part I can " 

That for thy right " 

Against thy reasons " 

knowing thy will " 

Be absent from thy walks " 

Thy sweet beloved name " 

Thy love is better " 

But do thy worst " 

than thy love will stay " 

on thy humour doth depend " 

on thy revolt doth lie " 

Happy to have thy love " 
Thy looks with me, thy heart in 

other place " 



THY 



316 



THY 



Thy — I cannot know thy change Son 

in thy creation did decree " 

Tliat in thy face " 
Whate'er thy thoughts or thy 

heart's workings be " 

Tliy looks should nothing " 

doth thy beauty grow " 
If thy sweet virtue answer not thy 

show " 

of thy budding name ". 

dost thou thy sins inclose " 

the story of thy days " 

comments on thy sport " 

Naming thy name " 

Some say, tl^ fault is youth " 

Some say, thy grace is j'outh " 

the strength of all thy state " 

mine is thy good report " 
whence didst thou steal thy sweet " 

Which on thy soft clieek " 

condemned for thy hand " 

had stol'n thy hair " 

had annex'd thy breath " 

gives thee all thy might " 

Spend'st thou thy fury " 

Darkening thy power " 

that doth thy lays esteem " 

And gives thy pen " 

what shall be thy amends " 

For thy neglect " 

Then do thy office " 

shalt iind thy monument " 

or th}' dear merit " 

I hallow'd thj' fair name " 

in thy breast doth lie " 

all thy sum of good " 

Even to thy pure " 

Thy gift, thy tables " 

Of thee, thy record " 

thy dear love to score " 

Thy pyramids built up " 

Thy registers and thee " 

For thy records and what " 

by thy continual haste " 

despite thy scythe and thee " 

obsequious in thy heart " 

stands least in thj' control " 

who in thy power •' 
Thy lovers withering as thy sweet 

self grow'st " 

With thy sweet fingers " 

tender inward of thy hand " 

O'er whom thy fingers walk " 
Give them thy fingers, me thy lips 

to kiss " 

Thy face hath not the power " 

but thinking on thy face " 

Thy black is fairest " 

black save in thy deeds " 

Knowing thy heart torments " 

eyes become thy face " 

as well beseem thy heart " 

And suit thy pity " 

that thy complexion lack " 

thy cruel eye " 

thy steel bosom's ward " 

am mortgaged to thy will " 

The statute of thy beauty " 

thou hast thy ' Will " 



93 


6 


93 


9 


93 


10 


93 


11 


93 


12 


93 


13 


93 


14 


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4 


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5 


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6 


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8 


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1 


9fi 


2 


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12 


96 


14 


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2 


99 


4 


99 


6 


99 


7 


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11 


100 


2 


100 


3 


100 


4 


100 


7 


100 


8 


101 


1 


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2 


101 


13 


107 


13 


108 


4 


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8 


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4 


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12 


110 


14 


122 


1 


122 


8 


122 


10 


123 


2 


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9 


123 


11 


123 


12 


123 


14 


125 


9 


125 


14 


126 


1 


126 


4 


128 


3 


128 


6 


128 


11 


128 


14 


131 


6 


131 


10 


131 


12 


131 


13 


132 


2 


132 


9 


132 


10 


132 


12 


182 


14 


133 


5 


133 


9 


134 


2 


134 


9 


135 


1 



Thy — To thy sweet will " Son 

'Will,' add to thy 'Will 

make thy large ' Will ' more " 

If thy soul check thee " 
Swear to thy blind soul that I was 

thy 'Will 

And will, thy soul knows " 

the treasure of thy love " 

Though in thy stores " 

Make but my name thy love " 

That thy unkindness " 

but with thy tongue " 

when thy might " 

thy proud heart go wide " 

thy tongue's tune delighted " 

Thy proud heart's slave " 

and thy dear virtue hate " 

Root pity in thy heart " 

Thy pity may deserve " 

Whilst I, thy babe, chase " 

But if thou catch thy hope " 

mayst have thy ' Will " 

Painting thy outward walls " 

thy fading mansion spend " 
Eat up thy charge? is this thy 

body's end " 

upon thy servant's loss " 

to aggravate thy store " 

thy foul faults should find " 

all tyrant for thy sake " 

thy service to despise " 

doth worship thy defect " 

now I know thy mind " 

refuse of thy deeds " 

thy worst all best exceeds " 

If thy unwortliiness raised love " 

thy sweet self prove " 

But rising at thy name " 

thy poor drudge to be " 
To stand in thy affairs, fall by thy 

side " 

In act thy bed-vow broke " 

of thy deep kindness " 
Oaths of thy love, thy truth, thy 

constancy " 
It is thy last L C 
Thy grace being gain'd P P 

that I thy parts admire " 

thy voice his dreadful thunder " 

left'st me nothing in thy will " 
Thy discontent thou didst bequeath " 

thy cheeks may blow " 

pluck thee from thy thorn " 

Turning mortal for thy love " 

Thy like ne'er was " 

thou comest thy tale to tell " 

Smooth not thy tongue " 

And set thy person forth " 

frame all thy ways " 

Where thy desert may merit " 

By ringing in thy lady's ear " 

And in thy suit be humble true " 

Unless thy lady prove unjust " 
To live with thee and be thy love " 

None takes pity on thy pain " 
All thy friends are lapp'd in lead " 

All thy fellow birds do sing " 

Careless of thy sorrowing " 

Every man will be thy friend " 



135 


4 


135 


11 


135 


12 


136 


1 


136 


2 


136 


3 


136 


5 


136 


10 


136 


13 


139 


2 


139 


3 


139 


7 


140 


14 


141 


5 


141 


12 


142 


1 


142 


11 


142 


12 


143 


10 


143 


11 


143 


13 


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4 


146 


6 


145 


8 


146 


9 


146 


10 


148 


14 


149 


4 


149 


10 


149 


11 


149 


13 


150 


6 


150 


8 


150 


13 


151 


4 


151 


9 


151 


11 


151 


12 


152 


3 


152 


9 


152 


10 




168 


3 


8 


5 


10 


5 


11 


10 


8 


10 


12 


17 


9 


17 


12 


17 


18 


18 


50 


19 


7 


19 


8 


19 


12 


19 


25 


19 


27 


19 


28 


19 


32 


19 


33 


20 


20 


21 


20 


21 


24 


21 


25 


21 


26 


21 


35 



THY 



317 



TIME 



Thy— No man will supply thy want PP 21 38 

He that is thy friend indeed " 21 51 
He will help thee in thy need " 21 52 
That thy sable gender makest P T 18 

Thjself— Then woo thyself, be of 

thyself rejected V A 159 

when thou thyself art dead " 172 

An image like thyself " 664 

So in thyself, thyself art " 763 

Thyself art mighty U L 583 

Honour thyself to rid me " 1031 

Kill both thyself and her " 1036 

to give thyself a blow " 1823 

Thyself thy foe Son 1 8 

thyself thy beauty's legacy "42 

with thyself alone "49 

Thou of thyself thy sweet self " 4 10 

That's for thyself to breed "67 

Ten times thyself "69 

So thou, thyself out-going " 7 13 

consumest thyself in single life "92 

thyself art so unprovident " 10 2 

That 'gainst thyself " 10 6 

Or to thyself at least " 10 12 

If from thyself to store " 14 , 12 

be of thyself so wary " 22 9 

O, give thyself the thanks 

When thou thyself 

if thou thyself deceivest 

of what thyself refusest 

Thyself away art present still 

thou thyself dost pay 

Thyself thou gavest 

to steal thyself away 

and length thyself to-morrow 

Tickled — To be so tickled 

Tickling-— Block with thy tickling 
beams 

Tide— The crystal tide 
hegan to turn their tide 
my uncontrolled tide 
his weary noon-tide prick 
the violent roaring tide 
Held back his sorrow's tide 

Tidings — no tidings of her love 
And gazed for tidings 

Tie— To tie the rider 
Will tie the hearers 
To tie up envy evermore 
do tie me day by day 

Tied — being tied unto a tree 
tied to the tree 

made tongue-tied by authority 
To make me tongue-tied 
My tongue-tied Muse 
judgement of my heart is tied 
My tongue-tied patience 
their poor balls are tied 
Her hair, nor loose nor tied 

Tiger — The tiger would be tame 
To slay the tiger 
than tigers in their wildness 
from the fierce tiger's jaws 

Till — Till either gorge be stuff 'd 
Till he take truce 
From morn till night 
Till clapping makes it red 
Till his breath breatheth 
Till breathless he disjoin'd 



" 


38 


5 


" 


38 


8 


" 


40 


7 


" 


40 


8 


" 


47 


10 


" 


79 


14 


" 


87 


9 


" 


92 


1 


PP 


15 


18 


Son 128 


9 


'bl 




1090 


VA 




957 
979 


PL 




645 
781 
1667 
1789 


VA 




867 


PL 




254 


VA 




40 


PL 




818 


Son 


70 


12 


" 


117 


4 


VA 




263 
391 


Son 


66 


9 


" 


80 


4 


" 


85 


1 


" 


137 


8 


" 


140 


2 


LO 




24 
29 


VA 




1096 


PL 




955 
980 


Son 


19 


3 


VA 




58 
82 
154 
468 
474 
541 



Till— till they have singled VA 693 

Till forging Nature " 729 

Till the wild waves " 819 

Till, cheering up " 896 

Till mutual overthrow " 1018 

that they have wejjt till now " 1062 

Till sable Night, mother of dread P L 117 

Till every minute pays " 329 

till their eft'ects be tried " 353 

Till they might open " 399 

Till with her own white fleece " 678 

Till, like a jade " 707 

till he render right " 943 

Till life to death acquit " 1071 

I will not till my Collatine " 1177 

Till after a deep groan " 1276 

till action might become them " 1323 

till he return again " 1359 

till meeting greater ranks " 1441 

Till she despairing Hecuba beheld " 1447 

Till after many accents " 1719 

Till Lucrece' father " 1732 

Till manly shame bids him " 1777 

till it blow up rain " 1788 

Till Nature, as she wrought thee Son 20 10 

Till whatsoever star " 26 9 

Till then not show my head " 26 14 

till she have prevailed " 41 8 

to see till I see thee " 43 13 

Till I return, of posting " 51 4 

So, till the judgement " 55 13 

even till they wink with fullness " 56 6 

to do, till you require " 57 4 

till now never kept seat " 105 14 

Till each to razed oblivion " 122 7 

and till action, lust " 129 2 

Till my bad angel fire " 144 14 

sees not till heaven clears " 148 12 

Till thus he 'gan besiege me L C 177 

Till now did ne'er invite " 182 

till then were levell'd " 282 

Till ray bad angel fire P P 2 14 

Till looking on an Englishman " 16 3 

Lean'd her breast up-till a thorn " 21 10 

Tillage — Disdains the tillage Son 3 6 

Time — Make use of time VA 129 

Themselves in little time " 132 

The time is spent " 255 

by the rights of time " 759 

and twenty times, ' Woe, woe " S33 

twenty times cry so " 834 

A thousand times " ..... 1130 

Wonder of time " 1133 

Now stole upon the time P L 162 

these lets attend the tiine " 330 

by children in succeeding times " 525 

That through the length of times " 718 

proportion'd course of time " 774 

Thou grant'st no time " 90S 

Mis-shapen Time, copesmate " 925 

injurious, shifting Time " 930 

Time's otfice is to pine " 936 

Time's glory is to calm " 9.39 

To stamp the seal of time " 941 

time to tear his curled hair " 981 

time against himself to rave " 982 

time of time's help to despair " 983 

Let him have time to live " 984 

time a beggar's orts to crave " 985 



TIME 



318 



'TIS 



Time — And time to see one R L 986 

Let him have time to see " 988 

Let him have time to mark how 

slow time goes • " 990 

In time of sorrow " 991 

His time of folly and his time of 

sport " 992 

Have time to wail the abusing of 

his time " 994 

' O Time, thou tutor " 995 

At Time, at Tarquin " 1024 

He ten times pines " 1115 

when time is kept with tears " 1127 

The weary time she cannot " 1361 

Time's ruin, beauty's wreck " 1451 

time doth weary time " 1570 

Short time seems long " 1573 

see time how slow it creeps " 1575 

Which all this time " 1576 

Three times with sighs " 1604 

death by time outworn " 1761 

Time, cease thou thy course " 1765 

should by time decease Son 1 3 

Now is the time "32 

this thy golden time " 3 12 

time leads summer on "55 

Or ten times happier "68 

Ten times thyself "69 

ten times refigured thee " 6 10 

the times should cease " 11 7 

the clock that tells the time " 12 1 

wastes of time must go " 12 10 

'gainst Time's scythe " 12 13 

Where wasteful Time " 15 11 

Time for love of you " 15 13 

this bloody tyrant, Time " 16 2 

Which this, Time's pencil " 16 10 

in time to come " 17 1 

of yours alive that time " 17 13 

to time thou grow'st " 18 12 

Devouring Time, blunt thou " 19 1 

swift-footed Time " 19 6 

do thy worst, old Time " 19 13 

time's furrows I behold " 22 3 

my dear time's waste " 30 4 

the bettering of the time " 32 5 

ten times happy me " 37 14 

ten times more in worth " 38 9 

To entertain the time " 39 11 

Which time and thoughts " 39 12 

1 must attend time's leisure " 44 12 
Another time mine eye " 47 7 
Against that time, if ever that time 

come " 49 1 

Against that time when thou " 49 5 

Against that time do I " 49 9 

So is the time " 52 9 

hesmear'd with sluttish time " 55 4 

and times of your desire " 57 2 

I have no precious time " 57 S 

control your times of pleasure " 58 2 

may privilege your time " 58 10 

And Time that gave " 60 8 

Time doth transfix " 60 9 

And yet to times in hope " 60 13 

With Time's injurious " 63 2 

For such a time " 63 9 

by Time's fell hand defaced " 64 1 

That Time will come " 64 12 



Time — but Time decays Son 65 8 
Shall Time's best jewel from Time's 

chest lie hid " 65 10 

being woo'd of time " 70 6 

That time of year " 73 ' 1 

Why with the time " 76 3 

Time's thievish progress " 77 8 
And yet this time removed was 

summer's time " 97 5 

time so idly spent " 100 6 

If Time have any wrinkle " 100 10 

And make Time's spoils despised " 100' 12 

faster than Time wastes life " 100 13 

chronicle of wasted time " 106 1 

Of this our time " 106 10 

of this most balmy time " 107 9 

AVhere time and outward form " 108 14 
Just to the time, not with the 

time exchanged " 109 7 

But reckoning Time " 115 5 

fearing of Time's tyranny " 115 9 

Love's not Time's fool " 116 9, 

And given to time "117 6 

you've pass'd a hell of time " 120 6 

No, Time, thou shalt not boast " 123 1 
As subject to Time's love or to 

Time's hate " 124 3 

inviting time our fashion calls " 124 8 

call the fools of time " 124 13 

hold Time's fickle glass " 126 2 

May time disgrace " 126 8 

Time had not scythed all L C 12 

When time shall serve PP 19 35 

When time with age " 19 46 

Time-begniliiig — Such .... sport VA 24 

Timo-bettering — of the .... days Son 82 8 

Timeless — His all-too-timeless speed iJ Z/ 44 

Timely— alack, too timely shaded P P 10 3 

Timorous — the flying hare VA 674 

so the timorous yelping " 881 

Tincture — tincture of the roses Son 54 6 

Tip— So on the tip L C 120 

Tire — Tires with her beak V A 56 

Self-will himself doth tire R L 707 

And you in Grecian tires Son 53 8 

Tired— tired in the mid-day heat VA 177 

that's tired with chasing " 561 

his wilful eye he tired is! L 417 

moan tired moan " 1363 

with one poor tired tongue " 1617 

for limbs with travel tired Son 27 2 

tired with my woe " 50 5 

Tired with all these " 66 1 

Tired with all these " 66 13 

'Tis— 'Tia but a kiss I beg VA 96 

What 'tis to love " 202 

And 'tis your fault " 381 

'Tis much to borrow " 411 

shrieks, — 'tis very late " 531 

yet 'tis pluck'd " 574 

and now 'tis dark " 719 

' 'Tis so :' they answer all ' 'Tis so " 851 

'tis a causeless fantasy " 897 

"Tis not my fault " " 1003 

'Tis he, foul creature " 1005 

"Tis true, 'tis true " 1111 

And so 'tis thine " 1181 

And 'tis thy right " 1184 

What terror 'tis RL 453 



'TIS 



319 



TO 



'Tis— 'Tis thou that executest B L 877 

'Tis thou that spurn'st " 880 

Sometime 'tis mad " 1106 

'Tis double death to drown " 1114 

'Tis honour to deprive " 1186 

'Tis but a part of sorrow " 1328 

For now 'tis stale to sigh " 1362 

For 'tis a meritorious fair design " 1692 

' He, he, fair lords, 'tis he " 1721 

'tis mine that she hath kill'd " 1803 

1he frame wherein 'tis held Son 24 3 

'Tis not enough that through " 34 5 

'Tis thee, myself, that " 62 13 

I say ' 'Tis so, 'tis true " 85 9 

'tis with so dull a cheer " 97 13 

Alas, 'tis true " 110 1 

O, 'tis the first ; 'tis flattery " 114 9 

'tis the lesser sin " 114 13 

'Tis better to be vile " 121 1 

But 'tis my heart that loves " 141 3 

'Tis promised in the charity L C 70 

Beauty brag, but 'tis not she P T 63 

Titan— And Titan, tired VA 177 

Title— Thy smoothing titles R L 892 

and proud titles boast Son 25 2 

To 'cide this title " 46 9 

O what a happy title " 92 11 

To — hied him to the chase V A 3 

love he laugh'd to scorn " 4 

'gins to woo him " 6 

Stain to all nymphs " 9 

to alight thy steed " 13 

to the saddle-bow " 14 

to do a goddess good " 28 

to iiluck him from his horse " 30 

unapt to toy " 34 

To tie the rider she begins to prove " 40 

and 'gins to chide " 46 

To fan and blow them " 52 

Forced to content, but never to obey " 61 

added to a river " 71 

to a pretty ear " 74 

never to remove " 81 

So offers he to give " 88 

to sport and dance " ' 105 

To toy, to wanton " 106 

to my coy disdain " 112 

Art thou ashamed to kiss " 121 

Be bold to play " 124 

or seem to melt " 144 

Not gross to sink " 150 

where I list to sport me " 154 

to thine own face affected " 157 

And died to kiss " 162 

Torches are made to light, jewels 

to wear " 163 

Dainties to taste " 164 

sappy plants to bear " 165 

growing to themselves " 166 

to get it is thy duty " 168 

thou art bound to breed " 171 

queen began to sweat " 175 

had his team to guide " 179 

makest thou to be gone " 188 

What 'tis to love " 202 

struggles to be gone " 227 

To shelter thee " 238 

there he came to lie " 245 

to swallow Venus' liking " 248 



To— To love a cheek V A 252 

hasteth to his horse " 258 

to her straight goes he " 264 

to captivate the eye " 281 

To bid the wind a base " 303 

to see him woo her " 309 

to his melting buttock lent " 315 

about to take him " 319 

strive to over-fly them " 324 

and begins to glow " 337 

wistly to view " 343 

to the wayward boy " 344 

To note the fighting conflict " 345 

to his eyes suing " 356 

to get my palfrey " 384 

tied to the tree " 391 

To touch the fire " 402 

To take advantage " 405 

O, learn to love " 407 

'Tis much to borrow " 411 

to love is love but to disgrace it " 412 

To love's alarms " 424 

to hear nor see " 437 

to thee be still as much " ..... 442 

wert thou to the taste " 445 

Which to his speech " 452 

Wreck to the seaman, tempest to 

the field " 454 

sorrow to shepherds " 455 

to herdmen and to herds " 456 

to reprehend her " 470 

To mend the hurt " 478 

now is turn'd to day " 481 

Do I delight to die " 496 

leaders to their queen " 503 

to drive infection " 508 

still to be sealing " 512 

To sell myself I can be " 513 

seek not to know me " 525 

is sour to taste " 528 

gone to fold, birds to their nest " 532 

Do summon us to part " 534 

face grows to face " 540 

fall to the earth ' " 546 

she begins to forage " 554 

to every light impression " 566 

longer to restrain him " 579 

look well to her heart " .... 580 

mine eyes to watch " 584 

To hunt the boar " 588 

To clip Elysium, and to lack her joy " 600 

She seeks to kindle " 606 

to withhold me so . " 612 

a churlish swine to gore " 616 

Like to a mortal butcher, bent to 

kill " 618 

To which Love's eyes " 632 

hath nought to do " 638 

not to dissemble " 641 

presenteth to mine eye " 661 

to overshoot his troubles " 680 

to amaze his foes " 684 

To make the cunning hounds " 686 

to stop the loud pursuers " 688 

are driven to doubt " 692 

to hearken if his foes " 699 

To one sore sick " 702 

To make thee hate " 711 

this to that and so to so " 713 



TO 



320 



TO 



To— to rob thee of a kiss VA 723 

To shame the sun " 732 

To cross the curious workmanship " 734 

To mingle beauty " 735 

subject to the tyranny " 737 

to lend the world his light " 756 

to bury that posterity " 758 

gold that's put to use " 768 

to be barr'd of rest " 784 

longs not to groan " 785 

that leadeth on to danger " 788 

bawd to lust's abuse " 792 

Love to heaven is fled " 793 

to your wanton talk " 809 

bound him to her breast " 812 

to spend the night withal " 847 

as thou dost lend to other " 864 

hasteth to a myrtle grove " 865 

she coasteth to the cry " 870 

to make her stay " 873 

Hasting to feed her fawn " 876 

to be so curst " 887 

to surprise her heart " 890 

to rate the boar " 906 

To whom she speaks " 918 

to the ground below " 923 

To stifle beauty and to steal his " 934 

smell to the violet " 936 

thou hast no eyes to see " 939 

to strike him dead " 948 

all other eyes to see " 952 

sought still to dry " 964 

doth labour to expel " 976 

to turn their tide " 979 

To wash the foul face " 983 

Not to believe " 986 

Death is not to blame " 992 

call'd him all to nought " 993 

to his hateful name " 994 

To be of such a weak " 1016 

To wail his death " 1017 

As falcons to the hire " 1027 

to creep forth again " 1036 

To the disposing of her troubled " 1040 

seem'd with him to bleed " 1056 

her joints forgot to bow " 1061 

eyes are turn'd to fire, my heart 

to lead " 1072 

ever strive to kiss you " 1082 

Having no fair to lose " 1083 

to rob him of his fair " 1086 

To see his face " 1093 

To recreate himself " 1095 

He thought to kiss him " 1110 

to persuade him there " 1114 

teach the fool to speak " 1146 

to tread the measures " 1148 

Put fear to valour, courage to the 

coward " 1158 

servile to all discontents " 1161 

matter is to fire " 1162 

the new-sprung flower to smell " 1171 

to her Adonis' breath " 1172 

which she compares to tears " 1176 

To wet his eyes " 1179 

To grow unto himself " 1180 

To wither in my breast " 1182 

their course to Paphos " 1193 

Means to immure herself " 1194 



To— And to Collatium RL 4 

lurks to aspire " 5 

To praise the clear " 11 

espoused to more fame " 20 

to such a peerless dame " 21 

To set forth " 32 

To quench the coal " 47 

the golden age to gild " 60 

thus to use it " 62 

makes them still to fight " 68 

To those two armies " 76 

his barren skill to show " 81 

to her princely guest " 90 

open'd to the light " 105 

He stories to her ears " 106 

And every one to rest " 125! 

yet ever to obtain " 1291 

persuade him to abstaining " 130 ' 

Despair to gain " 131 

Is but to surfeit " 139 

to nurse the life " 141 

we leave to be " 148 

to obtain his lust " 156 

to find a stranger just " 159 

To slanderous tongues " 161 

wakes to stain and kill " 168 

betake him to retire " 174 

to his lustful eye " 179 

And to the flame " 180 

I force to my desire " 182 

To darken her " 191 

to so pure a shrine " 194 

' O shame to knighthood, and to 

shining arms " 197 

to my household's grave " 198 

to be soft fancy's slave " 200 

To cipher me " 207 

To wish that I " 210 

to wail a week " 213 

to get a toy " 214 

but to touch the crown " 216 

this vile purpose to prevent " 220 

This blur to youth, this sorrow to 

the sage " 222 

to betray my life " 233 

to work upon his wife " 235 

Forced it to tremble " 261 

to the unjust " 285 

appeal seeks to the heart " 293 

marcheth to Lucrece' bed " 301 

to some regard " 305 

to have him heard " 306 

shriek to see him there " 307 

to make him stay " 311 

' This glove to wanton tricks " 320 

To add a more rejoicing to the 

prime " 332 

more cause to sing " 333 

to pray he doth begin " 342 

auspicious to the hour " 347 

The powers to whom " 349 

to his hand full soon " 370 

To draw the cloud " 371 

To wink, being blinded " 375 

league to kill " 383 

Lucrece to their sight " 384 

seems to part in sunder " 388 

to want his bliss " 389 

To be admired " 392 



TO 



321 



TO 



To— to adorn the day R L 399 

to heave the owner out " 413 

leading to his hand " 436 

to make his stand " 438 

to the quiet cabinet " 442 

this tumult to behold " 447 

Like to a new-kill'd bird " 457 

to batter such an ivory wall " 464 

Wounding itself to death " 466 

To make the breach " 469 

To sound a parley to his heartless 

foe " 471 

this rash alarm to know " 473 

seeks to show " 474 

I come to scale " 481 

if thou mean to chide " 484 

to this night " 485 

AVhich I to conquer sought " 488 

to gaze on beauty " 496 

to embrace mine infamy " 504 

I purpose to destroy thee " 514 

To kill thine honour " 516 

I mean to place him " 517 

to a great good end " 528 

bequeath not to their lot " 534 

To the rough beast " 545 

to her plaining " 559 

Which to her oratory " 564 

That to his borrow'd bed " 573 

And stoop to honour, not to foul 

desire " 574 

gave drink to thee " 577 

To strike a poor unseasonable doe " 581 

labour hence to heave thee " 586 

To soften it " 591 

dissolved to water " 592 

to do him shame " 597 

To all the host of heaven " 598 

To privilege dishonour " 621 

to guard iniquity " 626 

all that brood to kill " 627 

He learn'd to ^in " 630 

To view thy present trespass " 632 

to themselves appear " 633 

■ ' To thee, to thee " 638 

Not to seducing lust " 639 

To their salt sovereign " 650 

Add to his flow " 651 

Who seek to stain " 655 

to the base shrub's foot " 664 

low vassals to thy state " 666 

Yield to my love " 668 

I mean to bear thee " 670 

To be thy partner " 672 

converts to cold disdain " 691 

Like to a bankrupt " 711 

To whose weak ruins " 720 

To ask the spotted princess " 721 

To living death " 726 

To cloak offences " 749 

To have their unseen sin " 753 

to close so pure a mind " 761 

to meet the eastern light " 773 

the sun to climb " 775 

ere he go to bed " 776 

to blush with me " 792 

To cross their arms " ■ 793 

To mask their brows " 794 

to the tell-tale Day " 806 

21 



To— To cipher what is writ R L 811 

to still her child " 813 

to deck his oratory " 815 

to Tarquin's shame " 816 

to attend each line " 818 

to him allotted " 824 

was pure to Collatine " 826 

to disdain him " 844 

his treasure to behold " 857 

to be master'd " 863 

To hold their cursed-blessed for- 
tune " 866 

turn to loathed sours " 867 

to seize the souls " 882 

Thy honey turns to gall, thy joy 

to grief " 889 

turns to open shame " 890 

to a public fast " 891 

to a ragged name " 892 

to bitter wormwood taste " 893 

great strifes to end " 899 

Give physic to the sick, ease to 

the pained " 901 

have to do with thee " 911 

As well to hear " 915 

have come to me " 916 

To all sins past and all that are 

to come " 923 

to the general doom " 924 

slave to false delight " 927 

thou gavest me to repose " 933 

To endless date " 935 

Time's office is to fine " 936 

To eat up errors " 937 

to calm contending kings " 939 

To unmask falsehood and bring 

truth to light " 940 

To stamp the seal " 941 

To wake the morn " 942 

To wrong the wronger " 943 

To ruinate proud buildings " 944 

' To fill with worm-holes " 946 

To feed oblivion " 947 

To blot old books " 948 

To pluck the quills " 949 

To dry the old oak's sap " 950 

To spoil antiquities " 951 

' To show the beldam daughters " 953 

To make the child a man " 954 

To slay the tiger " 955 

To tame the unicorn " 956 

To mock the subtle " 957 

To cheer the ploughman " 958 

return to make amends " 961 

to bad debtors " 964 

lackey to eternity " 967 

To make him curse " 970 

To make him moan " 977 ' 

to him lose their mildness " 979 

Wilder to him than tigers " 980 

to tear his curled hair " 981 

against himself to rave " 982 

of time's help to despair " 983 

to live a loathed slave " 984 

a beggar's orts to crave " 985 

And time to see " 986 

Disdain to him disdained scraps 

to give " 987 

to see his friends " 988 



TO 



322 



TO 



To— to mock at liim R L .. 


.. 989 


to mark how slow " .. 


.. 990 


Have time to wail " .. 


... 994 


to good and bad " .. 


... 995 


Teach me to curse him " .. 


.. 996 


every hour to kill " .. 


.. 998 


to so base a slave " .. 


.. 1001 


To shame his hope " •• 


.. 1003 


servants to shallow fools " .. 


... 1016 


To trembling clients " ■• 


... 1020 


to do me good " •• 


... 1028 


Is to let forth " .. 


... 1029 


to rid me of this shame " .. 


... 1031 


to scratch her wicked foe " . 


... 1035 


To find some desperate instrument " . 


... 1038 


To make more vent " . 


... 1040 


to end a hapless life " . 


... 1045 


by Tarquin's falchion to he slain " . 


... 1046 


I sought to live " . 


... 1051 


not fear to die " . 


... 1052 


To clear this spot " . 


... 1053 


to slander's livery " . 


... 1054 


to living infamy " . 


.... 1055 


To burn the guiltless casket " . 


... 1057 


To flatter thee " . 


... 1061 


come to growth " . 


... 1062 


Till life to death " . 


.... 1071 


To hide the truth " . 


... 1075 


to purge my impure tale " . 


... 1078 


To ugly hell " . 


... 1082 


light to all fair eyes " . 


.... 1083 


shames herself to see " . 


.... 1084 


to point her out " . 


... 1087 


To whom she sobbing speaks " . 


.... 1088 


• hath nought to do " . 


.... 1092 


And to herself all sorrow " . 


.... 1102 


to drown in ken of shore ' " . 


.... 1114 


To see the salve " 


.... 1116 


to pleasing ears " . 


.... 1126 


To keep thy sharp woes " 


.... 1136 


To imitate thee well " 


.... 1137 


to affright mine eye " 


.... 1138 


to true languishment " 


.... 1141 


To creatures stern sad tunes, to 




change their kinds " 


.... 1147 


which way to fly " 


.... 1150 


To live or die " 


.... 1154 


'To kill myself " 


.... 1156 


be nurse to none " 


.... 1162 


to myself was nearer " 


.... 1165 


to Tarquin I'll bequeath " 


.... 1181 


'Tis honour to deprive " 


.... 1186 


bequeath to thee " 


.... 1192 


to the skies and ground " 


.... 1199 


To those that live " 


.... 1204 


Yield to my hand " 


1210 


to her mistress hies . " 


.... 1215 


to her lady's sorrow " 


.... 1221 


Their gentle sex to weep " 


1237 


Grieving themselves to guess " 


.... 12.S8 


those proud lords to blame " 


1259 


tenants to their shame " 


1260 


to do her husband wrong " 


1264 


Such danger to resistance " 


1265 


To the poor counterfeit " 


1269 


' The more to blame " 


1278 


to know your heaviness " 


1283 


that one hath power to tell " 


1288 


by and by to bear " 


1292 



To— A letter to my lord B L 1293 

prepare to carry it " 1294 

she prepares to write " 1296 

Health to thy person next vouch- 
safe t' aflbrd " 1305 

Some present speed to come " 1307 

She hoards, to spend when he is 

by to hear her " 1318 

better so to clear her " 1320 

To shun this blot " 1322 

To see sad sights " 1324 

interprets to the ear _ " 1325 

'At Ardea to my lord " 1332 

to hie as fast " 1334 

court'sies to her low " 1338 

to see her shame " 1344 

To talk in deeds " 1348 

no words to gage " 1351 

'tis stale to sigh, to weep " 1362 

to mourn some newer way " 1365 

she calls to mind " 1366 

the city to destroy " 1369 

to kiss the turrets bow'd " 1372 

to show the painter's strife " 1377 

the Greeks to fight " 1402 

purl'd up to the sky " 1407 

to swallow up " 1409 

To jump up higher seem'd to mock 

the mind " 1414 

seems to pelt and swear " 1418 

save to the eye " 1426 

to be imagined " 1428 

march'd to field " 1430 

To see their youthful sons " 1432 

And to their hope " 1433 

joy seemed to appear " 1434 

To Simois' reedy banks " 1437 

To imitate the battle " 1438 

To break upon the galled shore " 1440 

To this well-painted piece " 1443 

To find a face " 1444 

changed to black " 1454 

to the beldam's woes " 1458 

wants to answer " 1459 

to ban her cruel foes " 1460 

to lend her those " 1401 

To give her so much " 1463 

To plague a private sin " 1484 

And friend to friend " 1488 

To pencill'd pensiveness " 1497 

to Phrygian shepherds lent " 1502 

Onward to Troy " 1504 

seem'd to scorn his woes " 1505 

To hide deceit " 1507 

seem'd to welcome woe " 1509 

To me came Tarquin armed " 1544 

To see those borrow'd tears " 1549 

to burn thy city " 1554 

Only to flatter fools " 1559 

to burn his Troy " 1561 

to that unhappy guest " 1565 

To think their dolour " 1582 

to those already spent " 1589 

to ask her how " 1594 

to answer his desire " 1606 

to let them know " 1607 

to hear her words " 1610 

To tell them all " 1617 

it hath to say " 1618 



TO 



323 



TO 



To— might be done to me B L 1623 

thy liking to my will " 1633 

to start and cry " 1639 

should not live to speak " 1642 

my tongue to speak " 1648 

came evidence to swear " 1650 

to make mine own excuse " 1653 

To accessary yieldings " 1658 

begins to blow " 1663 

Back to the strait " 1670 

To push grief on " 1673 

to ray sorrow lendeth ■ " 1676 

To drown one woe • " 1680 

Speaking to those " 1689 

honourable faiths to me " 1690 

to venge this wrong " 1691 

To chase injustice " 1693 

began to promise aid " 1696 

to her imposition " 1697 

Longing to hear " 1698 

honour to advance " 1705 

at once began to say " 1709 

to give this wound to me " 1722 

Which seems to weep " 1746 

to this end " 1755 

If they surcease to be " 1766 

And counterfeits to die " 1776 

And live to be revenged " 1778 

Begins to talk " 1783 

to make it more " 1789 

Began to clothe his wit " 1809 

To check the tears " 1817 

set thy long-experienced wit to 

school " 1820 

to give thyself a blow " 1823 

To slay herself " 1827 

to bear thy part " 1830 

To rouse our Roman gods " 1831 

Her wrongs to us " 1840 

to end his vow " 1843 

And to his protestation " 1844 

to the ground " 1846 

to this advised doom " 1849 

to bear dead Lucrece thence " 1850 

To show her bleeding body " 1851 

to publish Tarquin's foul offence " 1852 

To Tarquin's everlasting banish- 
ment " 1855 

contracted to thine own bright 

eyes Son 1 5 

to thy sweet self too cruel "18 

herald to the gaudy spring " 1 10 

To eat the world's due " 1 14 

To say, within thine own "27 

were to be new made " 2 13 

to stop posterity "38 

remember'd not to be " 8 13 

lends to those are free "44 

given thee to give "46 

calls thee to be gone " 4 11 

lives til' executor to be " 4 14 

to the very same "53 

To hideous winter "56 

to breed another thee "67 

To be death's conquest " 6 14 

to his new-appearing "73 

Music to hear "81 

sweet husband to another "89 

Sings this to thee " 8 14 



To — to wet a widow's eye Son 

shalt hap to die " 

bear'st love to any " 

stick'st not to conspire " 

roof to ruinate " 

Which to repair " 

Or to thyself at least " 

Save breed, to brave him " 

to some other give " 

a house fall to decay " 

But not to tell " 

to brief minutes tell " 

Pointing to each his thunder " 

from thyself to store " 
To change your day of youth to 

sullied night " 

To give away yourself " 

my verse in time to come " 

The age to come " 
compare thee to a summer's day " 

to time thou grow'st " 

this gives life to thee " 

To the wide world " 

pattern to succeeding men " 

to my purpose nothing " 

beauty to his verse " 

that purpose not to sell " 

not to give back again " 

forget to say " 

strength seem to decay " 

O, learn to read " 
To hear with eyes belongs to love's 

fine wit " 
To find where your true image " 

Are windows to my breast " 
Delights to peep, to gaze therein " 

want to grace their art " 

to whom in vassalage " 

To thee I send this " 
To witness duty, not to show my wit " 

wanting words to show it " 

To show me worthy " 

may I dare to boast " 

I haste me to my bed " 

To work my mind " 

pilgrimage to thee " 

to my sightless view " 

enemies to cither's reign " 

shake hands to torture me " 

the other to complain " 

to please him " 

Wishing me like to one " 

Like to the lark " 

then I scorn to change " 

When to the sessions " 

unused to flow " 

woe to woe tell o'er " 

of me to thee did give " 

To march in ranks " 

basest clouds to ride " 

Stealing unseen to west " 

To let base clouds " 

To dry the rain " 

give physic to my grief " 

To him that bears " 

For to thy sensual fault " 

To that sweet thief " 

To see his active child " 

engrafted to this store " 



9 


1 


9 


3 


10 


1 


10 


6 


10 


7 


10 


8 


10 


12 


12 


14 


13 


4 


13 


9 


14 


3 


14 


5 


14 


6 


14 


12 


15 


12 


16 


13 


17 


1 


17 


7 


18 


1 


18 


12 


18 


14 


19 


7 


19 


12 


20 


12 


21 


2 


21 


14 


22 


14 


23 


5 


23 


7 


23 


13 


23 


14 


24 


6 


24 


11 


24 


12 


24 


13 


26 


1 


26 


3 


26 


4 


26 


6 


26 


12 


26 


13 


27 


1 


27 


4 


27 


6 


27 


10 


28 


5 


28 


6 


28 


7 


28 


9 


29 


5 


29 


11 


29 


14 


30 


1 


30 


5 


30 


10 


31 


11 


32 


12 


33 


5 


33 


8 


34 


3 


34 


6 


34 


9 


34 


12 


35 


9 


35 


14 


37 


2 


37 


8 



TO 



324 



TO 



To — ^want subject to invent Son 

paper to rehearse " 

cannot write to tliee " 

to outlive long date " 

to mine own self bring " 

That due to thee " 

. To entertain the time " 

how to make one twain " 

To bear love's wrong " 

and therefore to be won " 

therefore to be assailed " 

to break a twofold truth " 

tempting her to thee " 

being false to me " 

my sake to approve her " 

To the clear day " 

When to unseeing eyes " 

to see till I see thee " 

To leap large lengths " 

embassy of love to thee " 

Sinks down to death " 

recounting it to nie " 

How to divide " 

To 'cide this title " 

tenants to the heart " 

And to the painted banquet " 

to heart's and eye's delight " 

truest bars to thrust " 

That to my use " 

to whom my jewels trifles are " 

Call'd to that audit " 

To guard the lawful " 

To leave poor me " 

Since why to love " 

and that repose to say " 

to bear that weight " 
More sharp to me than spurring 

to his side " 

give him leave to go " 
bring him to his sweet up-locked " 

To make some special " 
Being had, to triumph, being 

lack'd, to hope " 

Die to themselves " 

out to the ending doom " 

Come daily to the banks " 

time at all to spend " 

Nor services to do " 

of hours to crave " 

to stay your leisure " 

tame to sufferance " 
To what you will; to you it doth 

belong " 

Yourself to pardon " 

I am to wait " 

To this composed wonder " 

To subjects worse have given " 

hasten to their end " 

crawls to maturity " 

for his scythe to mow " 

And yet to times " 

to the weary night " 

shadows like to thee do mock " 

into my deeds to pry " 

To find out shames " 

To play the watchman " 

to age's steepy night " 

slave to mortal rage " 

confounded to decay " 



38 


1 


To — tlius to ruminate Son 


64 


11 


38 


4 


But weep to have that which it 






38 


7 


fears to lose " 


64 


14 


88 


12 


As, to behold desert " 


66 


2 


39 


3 


Save that, to die " 


66 


14 


39 


8 


Beggar'd of blood to blush " 


67 


10 


39 


11 


to show what wealth " 


67 


13 


39 


13 


To live a second life " 


68 


7 


40 


12 


to dress his beauty new " 


68 


12 


41 


5 


To show false Art " 


68 


14 


41 


6 


To thy fair flower " 


69 


12 


41 


12 


To tie up envy " 


70 


12 


41 


13 


Give warning to the world " 


71 


3 


41 


14 


with vilest worms to dwell " 


71 


4 


42 


8 


task you to recite " 


72 


1 


43 


7 


To do more for me " 


72 


6 


43 


8 


no more to shame " 


72 


12 


43 


13 


to love things nothing worth " 


72 


14 


44 


10 


To love that well " 


73 


14 


45 


6 


was consecrate to thee " 


74 


6 


45 


8 


of thee to be remembered " 


74 


12 


45 


12 


So are you to my thoughts as food 






46 


2 


to life " 


75 


1 


46 


9 


showers are to the ground " 


75 


2 


46 


10 


to be with yOu alone " 


75 


7 


47 


6 


To new-found methods and to com- 






47 


14 


pounds strange " 


76 


4 


48 


2 


progress to eternity " 


77 


8 


48 


3 


Commit to these waste blanks " 


77 


10 


48 


5 


To take a new acquaintance " 


77 


12 


49 


4 


on high to sing " 


78 


5 


49 


12 


ignorance aloft to fly " 


78 


6 


49 


13 


to the learned's wing " 


78 


7 


49 


14 


No praise to thee " 


79 


12 


50 


3 


To make me tongue-tied " 


80 


4 


50 


6 


inferior far to his " 


80 


7 






your epitaph to make " 


81 


1 


50 


12 


to all the world must die " 


81 


6 


51 


14 


tongues to be your being " 


81 


11 


52 


2 


married to my Muse " 


82 


1 


52 


11 


enforced to seek anew " 


82 


7 






And therefore to your fair " 


83 


2 


52 


14 


That to his subject " 


84 


6 


54 


11 


You to your beauteous " 


84 


13 


55 


12 


To every hymn ' " 


85 


7 


56 


11 


And to the most of praise " 


85 


10 


57 


3 


whose love to you " 


85 


11 


57 


4 


by spirits taught to write " 


86 


5 


58 


3 


to whom thou gavest " 


87 


10 


58 


4 


to set me light " 


88 


1 


58 


7 


that to myself I do " 


88 


11 






to thee I so belong " 


88 


13 


58 


11 


To set a form " 


89 


G 


58 


12 


my deeds to cross " 


90 


2 


58 


13 


To linger out a purposed " 


90 


8 


59 


10 


than high birth to me " 


91 


9 


59 


14 


to steal thyself away " 


92 


1 


60 


2 


Then need I not to fear " 


92 


5 


60 


6 


state to me belongs " 


92 


7 


60 


12 


Happy to have thy love, happy to 






60 


13 


die " 


92 


12 


61 


2 


still seem love to me " 


93 


3 


61 


4 


have power to hurt " 


94 


1 


61 


6 


to temptation slow " 


94 


4 


61 


7 


is to the summer sweet " 


94 


9 


61 


12 


Though to itself " 


94 


10 


68 


5 


turn to fair that eyes can see " 


95 


12 


64 


4 


graces that to thee resort " 


96 


4 


64 


10 


To truths translated " 


96 


8 



TO 



325 



TO 



To — issue seem'd to me Son 

And to his robbery " 

eat hiiu up to death " 

To speak of that " 

power to lend base subjects " 

Sing to the ear " 

be 'a satire to decay " 

beauty's truth to lay " 

To make him much " 
And to be praised of ages yet to be " 

To make him seem long " 

I was wont to greet it " 

a scope to show her pride " 

striving to mend " 

To mar the subject " 

For to no other pass " 

and your gifts to tell " 

To me, fair friend, you never can " 

to yellow autumn turn'd " 

To one, of one, still such " 

to constancy confined " 

varying to other words " 

your worth to sing " 

Have eyes to wonder, but lack 

tongues to pi'aise " 

dreaming on things to come " 

forfeit to a confined doom " 

and Death to me subscribes " 

to thee my true spirit " 

What's new to speak, what new 

to register " 
Nor gives to necessary wrinkles " 

seem'd my flame to qualify " 

Just to the time " 

To leave for nothing " 

a motley to the view " 

to try an older friend " 

to whom I am confined " 

Even to thy pure and most " 

To what it works in " 

to correct correction " 

is enough to cure me " 

To know my shames " 
None else to me, nor I to none alive " 
To critic and to flatterer stopped 

are " 

which governs me to go about " 

delivers to the heart " 

it shapes them to your feature " 

To make of monsters " 

to his beams assemble " 

And to his palate " 
Divert strong minds to the course " 
To give full growth to that which 

still doth grow " 

Let me not to the marriage " 

the remover to remove " 

to every wandering bark " 

even to the edge of doom " 

dearest love to call " 

And given to time " 

to all the winds " 

I did strive to prove " 

to make our appetites " 

to prevent our maladies " 

sicken to shun sickness " 

To bitter sauces did I frame " 

To be diseased " 

in love, to anticipate " 



97 


9 


99 


11 


99 


13 


100 


2 


100 


4 


100 


7 


100 


11 


101 


7 


101 


11 


101 


12 


101 


14 


102 


6 


103 


2 


103 


9 


103 


10 


103 


11 


103 


12 


104 


1 


104 


5 


105 


4 


105 


7 


105 


10 


106 


12 


106 


14 


107 


2 


107 


4 


107 


10 


108 


2 


108 


3 


108 


11 


109 


2 


109 


7 


109 


12 


110 


2 


110 


11 


110 


12 


110 


14 


111 


7 


111 


12 


111 


14 


112 


6 


112 


7 


112 


11 


113 


2 


113 


5 


113 


12 


114 


5 


114 


8 


114 


12 


115 


8 


115 


14 


116 


1 


116 


4 


116 


7 


116 


12 


117 


3 


117 


6 


117 


7 


117 


13 


118 


1 


118 


3 


118 


4 


118 


6 


118 


8 


118 


9 



To — grew to faults assured Son 118 10 

And brought to medicine " 118 11 
Applying fears to hopes and hopes 

to fears "119 3 

I saw myself to win " 119 4 

rebuked to my content " 119 13 

To weigh how once " 120 8 

And soon to you " 120 11 

'Tis better to be vile " 121 1 

AVhen not to be receives " 121 2 

to my sportive blood "121 6 

even to eternity " 122 4 

by nature to subsist " 122 6 

Till each to razed oblivion " 122 7 

thy dear love to score " 122 10 

Therefore to give them " 122 11 

To trust those tables " 122 12 
To keep an adjunct to remember 

thee " 122 13 

"Were to import forgetfulness " 122 14 

To me are nothing novel " 123 3 ' 

born to our desire " 123 7 

to Time's love or to Time's hate " 124 3 

To this I witness call " 124 13 

Were't aught to me " 125 1 

keeps thee to this purpose "126 7 

is to render thee " 126 12 

To kiss the tender inward " 128 6 

To be so tickled " 128 9 

me thy lips to kiss " 128 14 

rude, cruel, not to trust " 129 4 

to make the taker mad " 129 8 

in quest to have, extreme ■ " 129 10 
To shun the heaven that leads men 

to this hell " 129 14 

I love to hear her speak " 130 9 

to my dear doting heart " 131 3 

to make love groan " 131 6 

To say they err . " 131 7 

swear it to myself alone " 131 8 

And to be sure . " 131 9 

to the sober west " 132 8 

To mourn for me " 132 11 

my heart to groan " 133 1 

to torture me alone " 133 3 

But slave to slavery " 133 4 

thus to be crossed " 133 8 

mortgaged to thy will " 134 2 

to be my comfort still " 134 4 

surety-like to write for me " 134 7 

that put'st forth all to use " 134 10 

And ' Will ' to boot " 135 2 

To thy sweet will " 135 4 

to hide my will " 135 6 

addeth to his store " 135 10 

add to thy 'Will " 135 11 

Swear to thy blind soul " 136 2 

something sweet to thee " 136 12 

dost thou to mine eyes " 137 1 

take the worst to be " 137 4 

To put fair truth " 137 12 

And to this false plague " 137 14 

not to have years told " 138 12 

call not me to justify " 139 1 

forbear to glance thine eye " 139 6 
Though not to love, yet, love, to 

tell me so " 140 6 

is pleased to dote " 141 4 

to base touches prone " 141 6 



TO 



326 



TO 



To — desire to be invited Son 141 7 

To any sensual feast " 141 8 

and vassal wretch to be " 141 12 

deserve to pitied be " 142 12 

tbou dost seek to have " 142 13 

housewife runs to oatch " 143 1 

Cries to catch her " 143 6 

To follow that which flies " 143 7 

turn back to me " 143 11 

To win me soon to hell " 144 5 

my saint to be a devil " 144 7 

both to each friend " 144 11 

To me that languish'd " 145 3 

taught it thus anew to greet " 145 8 

From heaven to hell " 145 12 

to aggravate thy store " 146 10 

appetite to please " 147 4 

the physician to my love " 147 5 

to say it is not so " 148 6 

thy service to despise " 149 10 

my heart to sway " 150 2 
To make me give the lie to my 

true sight " 150 3 

thee how to make me love " 150 9 

to be beloved of thee " 150 14 

to know what conscience is " 151 1 

to my gross body's treason " 151 6 

thy poor drudge to be " 151 11 

To stand in thy affairs " 151 12 

to me love swearing " 152 2 

but to misuse thee " 152 7 
And, to enlighten thee, gave eyes 

to blindness " 152 11 

To swear against the truth " 152 14 

still to endure " 153 6 

vow'd chaste life to keep " 154 3 

My spirits to attend L C 3 

to list the sad-tuned tale " 4 

her napkin to her eyne " 15 

to the spheres intend " 23 

To the orbed earth " 25 

To every place at once " 27 

And, true to bondage " 34 

applying wet to wet " 40 

seal'd to curious secrecy " 49 

often 'gan to tear " 51 

desires to know " 62 

his hearing to divide " 67 

Fresh to myself " 73 

Love to myself, and to no love be- 
side " 77 

it was to gain my grace " 79 

sweet to do, to do will aptly find " 88 

began but to appear " 93 

web it seem'd to wear " 95 

May and April is to see " 102 

To appertainiugs and to ornament " 115 

To make the weeper laugh " 124 

To dwell with him in thoughts, or 

to remain " 129 

To serve their eyes " 135 

pleasures to bestow them " 139 

To put the by-past perils " 158 

to make our wits more keen " 161 

satisfaction to our blood " 162 

To be forbod the sweets " 164 

ever brokers to defiling " 173 

That's to ye sworn to none was " 180 

put to the smallest teen " 192 



To — Harm have I done to them L C 194 

That is, to you " 222 

to your own command " 227 

and to your audit comes " 230 

To spend her living " 238 

what labour is't to leave " , 239 

so to herself contrives " 243 

brought me to her eye " 247 

Not to be tempted " 251 

And now, to tempt all " 252 

that to me belong " 254 

to physic your cold breast " 259 

to charm a sacred nun " 260 

when they to assail begun " 262 

sighs to you extend " 276 

To leave the battery " 277 

to my sweet design " 278 

to that strong bonded oath " 279 

to the stream gave grace " 285 

to water will not wear " 291 

Appear to him, as he to me " 299 

Applied to cautels " 303 

To blush at speeches rank, to weep 

at woes " 307 

Or to turn white " 308 

love not to have years told P P 1 12 

To win me soon to hell "25 

my saint to be a devil "27 
both to me, both to each friend " 2 11 

to this false perjury " 3 3 
To break an oath, to win a paradise " 3 14 

stories to delight his ear " 4 5 

favours to allure "46 

To win his heart "47 

to take her figured proffer " 4 10 

how shall I swear to love "51 

if not to beauty vowed "52 
Though to myself forsworn, to thee 

I'll constant prove "53 
to me like oaks, to thee like osiers 

bowed "54 

to know thee shall sufiice "57 

Which is to me some praise " 5 10 

Which, not to anger bent " 5 12 

To sing heaven's praise " 5 14 

to the hedge for shade "62 

used to cool his spleen "66 

damask dye to grace her "75 

none falser to deface her "76 

Her lips to mine "77 

many tales to please "79 

Dowland to thee is dear "85 

Spenser to me "87 

Thou lovest to hear "89 

to singing he betakes " 8 12 

didst bequeath to me " 10 12 

began to woo him " 11 2 
And as he fell to her, so fell she 

to him " 11 4 

To kiss and clip me " 11 14 

when first it 'gins to bud " 13 3 

And daff'd me to a cabin " 14 3 

To descant on the doubts " 14 4 

she joy'd to jest " 14 9 

again to make me wander " 14 10 

throw gazes to the east " 15 1 

Sorrow changed to solace " 15 11 

added to the hours " 15 14 

To spite me now " 15 15 



TO 



327 



TONGUE 



To — To leave the master loveless P P 16 6 

To put in practice either " 16 7 

to turn them both to gain " 16 10 

sick to death " 17 7 

Ne'er to pluck thee " 17 12 

so apt to pluck a sweet " 17 14 

that wont to have play'd " IS 29 

Procure to weep " 18 32 

to see my doleful plight " 18 33 

known to us poor swains " 18 45 

thy tale to tell " 19 7 

thy person forth to sell " 19 12 

to try her strength " 19 19 

taught her thus to say " 19 22 

And to her will frame " 19 25 

Spare not to spend " 19 26 

thou to choose anew " 19 34 

To proffer though she put " 19 36 

still to strive with men " 19 43 

To sin and never for to saint " 19 44 

stick to round me on th' ear " 19 51 

To teach my tongue to be so long " 19 52 

To hear her secrets " 19 54 

To live -with thee " 20 20 

That to hear it was great pity " 21 12 

That to hear her so " 21 15 

are hard to find " 21 34 

wherewith to spend " 21 36 

be addict to vice " 21 43 

to women he be bent " 2] 4o 

certain signs to know " 21 57 

To whose sound chaste wings obey P T 4 

To this troop come thou not near " 8 

To themselves yet either neither " 43 

To the phcenix and the dove " 50 

chorus to their tragic scene " 52 

To eternity doth rest " 58 

To this urn let those repair " 65 

Toad — Or toads infect fair founts P L 850 

To-day— Which but to-day Son 56 3 

although to-day thou fill " 56 5 

Kind is my love to-day " 105 5 

Together— such lamps .... mix'd V A 489 

Their lips together glued " 546 

mingled both together " 902 

join they all together " 971 

and all together lost P L 147 

All which together " 589 

shall together thrive Son 14 11 
age and youth cannot live to- 
gether PP 12 1 

Saw division grow togetlier P T 42 

Toil — Weary with toil, I haste me Son 27 1 

The one by toil, the other " 28 7 

How far I toil, still farther " 28 8 

In sequent toil all forward " 60 4 

Toil'd — forgot for which he toil'd " 25' 12 

Token — some watery token shows R L 1748 

Told— as if he told the steps VA 277 

told and quickly gone " 520 

woeful words she told " 1126 

if it should be told R L 1284 

more than hear them told " 1324 

manners most expressly told " 1397 

This told, I joy Son 45 13 

still telling what is told " 76 14 

we before have heard them told " 123 8 

loves not to have years told " 138 12 

loves not to have years told P P 1 12 



Told — She told him stories P P 4 5 

She told the youngling " 11 3 

Told'st — that thou tokl'st me VA 614 

Tomb — in a tomb so simple " 244 

statues, tombs, and stories " 1013 

so fond will be the tomb Son ?> 7 

it is but as a tomb " 17 3 

give life and bring a tomb " 83 12 

Making their tomb the womb " 86 4 

outlive a gilded tomb " 101 11 

and tombs of brass are spent " 107 14 
Tomb'd — must be tomb'd with thee " 4 13 

To-iuorrow — shall we meet ... . V A 585 

to-morrow he intends " 587 

with the boar to-morrow " 672 

To-morrow sharpen'd in his former 

might Son 56 4 

To-morrow see again " 56 7 

to-day, to-morrow kind " 105 5 

and come again to-morrow P P 14 5 

and bade me come to-morrow " 15 12 

and length thyself to-morrow " 15 18 

Tongue^chokes her pleading .... VA 217 

aidanee of the tongue " 830 

'hast thou a tongue " 427 

twenty thousand tongues " 775 

every tongue more moving " 776 

the boar provoked my tongue " 1003 

Grief hath two tongues " 1007 

my tongue cannot express " 1069 

Whose tongue is music now " 1077 

her husband's shallow tongue R L 78 

To slanderous tongues " 161 

Will not my tongue be mute " 227 

doth his tongue begin " 470 

Thy sugar'd tongue " 893 

My tongue shall utter all " 1076 

With untuned tongue " 1214 

With soft-slow tongue " 1220 

so much grief and not a tongue " 1463 

with my lamenting tongue " 1465 

And from her tongue 'can lurk " 1537 

with one poor tired tongue " 1617 

forbade my tongue to speak " 1648 

her poor tongue could not speak " 1718 

dumb arrest upon his tongue " 1780 

of less truth than tongue Son 17 10 

More than that tongue " 23 12 

All tongues, the voice of souls " 69 3 

But those same tongues " 69 6 

And tongues to be " 81 11 

and in my tongue " 89 9 

That tongue that tells the story " 95 5 
The owner's tongue doth publish " 102 4 

I sometime hold my tongue " 102 13 

but lack tongues to praise " 106 14 

and praises from your tongue " 112 6 

That every tongue says beauty " 127 14 

her false-speaking tongue " 138 7 

but with thy tongue " 139 3 

witli thy tongue's tune " 141 5 

Chiding that tongue " 145 6 

tip of his subduing tongue L C 120 

credit her false-speaking tongue PP 1 7 

is a soothing tongue " 1 11 

Well learned is that tongue "5 8 

with such an earthly tongue " 5 14 

Smooth not thy tongue " 19 8 

To teach my tongue , " 19 52 



TONGUE 



328 



TRAFFIC 



Tongue — in every sheplierd's .... P P 20 18 

Toiigued — Like shrill-tongued tap- 
sters VA 849 

With close-tongued treason Ji L 770 

For maiden-tongued he was L C 100 

Tongue-tied— made tongue-tied by- 
authority Son 66 9 
To make me tongue-tied " 80 4 
My tongue-tied Muse " 85 1 
My tongue-tied patience " 140 2 

To-night— Short, night, to-night P P 15 18 

Too— If they burn too, I'll VA 192 

■with too much handling " 560 

the orator too green " 806 

and yet too credulous " 986 

and too full of riot " 1147 

merciful and too severe " 1155 

His all-too-timeless speed R L 44 

sometime too much wonder " 95 

Doth too too oft betake him " 174 

handmaids too, by him defiled " 787 

Their, father was too weak, and 

they too strong " 865 

With too much labour " 1099 

and too much talk affords " 1106 

This is too curious-good " 1300 

too long with her remaining " 1572 

would be drawn out too long " 1616 

My woe too sensible " 1678 

Comes all too late " 16S6 

she too early and too late hath 

.spill'd " 1801 

to thy sweet self too cruel Son 1 8 

for thou art much too fair " 6 13 

hath all too short a date " 18 4 

Sometime too hot " 18 5 

replete with too much rage " 23 3 

sweet argument too excellent " 38 3 

with others all too near " 61 14 

Too base of thee " 74 12 

doth come too short " 83 7 

of all too precious you " 86 2 

Farewell, thou art too dear " 87 1 

be a gainer too " 88 9 

Lest I too much profane " 89 11 

thou hast too grossly dyed " 99 5 

So dost thou too " 101 4 

by paying too much rent " 125 6 

with too much disdain " 140 2 

Love is too young " 151 1 

too early I attended L C 78 

Ah, fool too froward PP 4 14 

alack ! too timely shaded " 10 3 

Fair creature, kill'd too soon " 10 4 

methinks thou stay'st too long " 12 12 

the night would post too soon " 15 13 

Neither too young " 19 6 

And then too late " 19 15 

But, soft ! enough,— too much " 19 49 

Took— birds such pleasure took VA 1101 

She took me kindly by the hand R L 253 

the roses took a^ray " 259 

'can lurk ' from 'cannot' took " 1537 

I took all patiently " 1641 

and heart a league is took Son 47 1 

when I took my way " 48 1 

or must from you be took " 75 12 

votary took up that fire " 154 5 

took heat perpetual " 154 10 



Tool — But this no slaughterhouse 

no tool imparteth R L 1039 

Tooth'd— Had I been tooth'd VA 1117 

Top — That cedar-tops and hills seem " 858 

and the top o'erstraw'd " 1143 

on the top of happy hours Son 16 5 

Flatter the mountain-tops " 33 2 

This said, in toia of rage L C 55 

Torch — Torches are made to light V A 163 

Whereat a waxen torch R L 178 

' Fair torch, burn out thy light " 190 

The wind wars with his torch " 311 

wind that fires the torch " 315 

Are by his flaming torch " 448 

Tore — as if the name he tore " 1787 

sigh'd, tore, and gave the flood L C 44 

Torment — torments us with defect R L 151 

But torment that it cannot " 861 

wh at a torment wouldst thou prove Son 39 9 

torments me with disdain " 132 2 

A torment thrice threefold " 133 8 

Tormenteth — want of love .... V A 202 

Torn — my image thou hast torn RL 1762 

and new faith torn So7i 152 3 

Torture— And that deep torture R L 1287 

shake hands to torture me Son 28 6 

to torture me alone " 133 3 

Toss'd — Is madly toss'd R L 171 

Touch— ' Touch but my lips VA 115 

To touch the fire " 402 

not see, nor hear, nor touch " 440 

but to touch the crown R L 216 

that touches me more nearly Son 42 4 

needs would touch my breast " 153 10 

would not touch the bait P P 4 11 

Touch — ten hundred touches V A 519 

Instead of love's coy touch R L 669 

Such heavenly touches Son 17 8 

What strained touches " 82 10 

to base touches prone " 141 6 

Touches so soft P P 4 8 

whose heavenly touch "85 

Touch'd — touch'd no unknown bait R L 103 

ne'er touch'd earthly faces Son 17 8 

that never touch'd his hand L C 141 

she touch'd him here and there PP 4 7 

Touching — by touching thee VA 438 

Toward— where it shows most to ward " 1157 

No love toward others Son 9 13 
Then fell she on her back, fair 

queen, and toward P P 4 13 

Towards — Towards thee I'll run Son 51 14 

make towards the pebbled shore " 60 1 

Towards this afilicted fancy L C 61 

Tower— glittering golden towers R L 945 

And from the towers of Troy " 1382 

lofty towers I see down-razed Son 64 3 
The strongest castle, tower, and 

town PP 19 29 

Towering — towering in the skies R L 506 

Town— The strongest castle, tower, 

and town PP 19 29 

Toy— appetite, unapt to toy VA 34 

To toy, to wanton " 106 

Or sells eternity to get a toy R L 214 

The tricks and toys P P 19 39 

Tract— From his low tract Son 7 12 

Traffic— doth traffic oft for gaining R L 131 

For having traffic with thyself Son 4 9 



TRAGEDY 



329 



TROJAN 



Tragedy — Black stage for tragedies R L 766 

Tragic — and swound at tragic shows i^ C 308 

As chorus to their tragic scene P T 52 

Traitor — his traitor eye encloses R L 78 

ere traitors be espied " 361 

executest the traitor's treason " 877 

thou traitor, thou false thief " 888 

yet let the traitor die " 1686 

Trampling — Adonis' .... courser VA 261 

Trance — with restless trances R L 974 

old acquaintance in a trance " 1595 

Transferred — are they now .... Son 137 14 

Transfix— Time doth the flourish " 60 9 

Transgressed — that hath .... so R L 1481 

Transgression — Their own trans- 
gressions " 6.34 

under my transgression bow Son 120 3 

Translate — he could his looks .... " 96 10 

Translated — To truths translated " 96 8 

Transport— Which should me "117 8 

Trapping— or trapping gay VA 286 

Travail — As if with grief or travail RL 1543 

Deserves the travail Son 79 6 
Travel — for limbs with travel tired " 27 2 

And make me travel forth " 34 2 

my weary travel's end " 50 2 

Like him that travels " 109 6 

Travell'd— Hath travell'd on " 63 5 

Tread— She treads the path VA 908 

she treads on it so light " 1028 

to tread the measures " 1148 

That cannot tread the way R L 1152 

treads on the ground Son 130 12 

The cock that treads them J" P 19 40 

Treason — condemn'd of treason VA 729 

Thus treason works R L 361 

By their high treason " 369 

With close-tongued treason " 770 

executest the traitor's treason " 877 

Wrath, envy, treason, rape " 909 

Guilty of treason " 920 

to my gross body's treason Son 151 6 

Treasure — his lips' rich treasure V A 552 

the hidden treasure frets " 767 

As one with treasure laden " 1022 

what treasure hast thou lost " 1075 

enrich the poor with treasures " 1150 

Unlock'd the treasure R L 16 

And when great treasure " 132 

sinking where such treasure lies " 280 

his treasure to behold " 857 

the treasure stol'n away " 1056 

AVhere all the treasure Son 2 6 

With beauty's treasure "64 

thy love's use their treasure " 20 14 

to his sweet up-locked treasure " 52 2 

the treasure of his spring " 63 8 

will steal his treasure " 75 6 

but not still keep her treasure " 126 10 

fulfil the treasure of thy love " 136 5 

Treasure — treasure thou some place "63 

Treatise — Your treatise makes me V A 774 

Treble — heart hath treble wrong " 329 

Treble-dated— And thou crow P T 17 

Tree — like sturdy trees V A 152 

tied unto a tree " 263 

tied to the tree " 391 

When lofty trees I see Son 12 5 

that hangs upon a tree P P 10 5 



Tree— Trees did grow P P 2i 6 

Senselesss trees they cannot hear 
thee " 21 21 

On the sole Arabian tree P T 2 

Tremble— she trembles at his tale VA 591 

my joints did tremble " 642 

tremble at the imagination " 668 

tremble with her loyal fear R L 261 

he saw them quake and tremble " 1393 

Trembling — trembling in her pas- 
sion VA 27 

in a trembling ecstasy " 895 

with trembling terror die R L 231 

she trembling lies " 457 

With trembling fear " 511 

To trembling clients " 1020 

marching on with trembling paces " 1391 

thou dost trembling stand " 1599 

Trench — And dig deep trenches Son 2 2 

Trench'd— that the boar had .... VA 10.52 

Trespass — Shalt have thy trespass R L 524 

To view thy present trespass " 632 

Will quote my loathsome trespass " 812 

And with my trespass " 1070 

for trespass of thine eye " 1475 

shall fit the trespass best " 1613 

Authorizing thy trespass Son 35 6 

But that your trespass " 120 13 

Tress— Before the golden tresses " 68 5 

Trial— accidental things of trial R L 326 

The boy for trial Son 153 10 

Tribe — insults o'er dull and speech- 
less tribes " 107 12 

Tributary — pay tributary gazes V A 632 

tributary subject quakes " 1045 

Tribute — Paying more slavish .... R L 299 

Look here, what tributes L C 197 

Trick — taught them scornful tricks V A 501 

' This glove to wanton tricks R L 320 

The tricks and toys P P 19 39 

Tried— Thus my strength is tried VA 280 

till their effects be tried R L 353 

Trifle— Trifles unwitnessed VA 1023 

Each trifle under truest bars Son 48 2 

to whom my jewels trifles are " 48 5 

Trim — colours fresh and trim V A 1079 

dress'd in all his trim .Son 98 2 
yet their purposed trim L C 118 

Trimm'd— nothing in jollity Son 66 8 

Trip — trip upon the green V A 146 

thy footing trips " 722 

Tripping — Came tripping by Son 154 4 

Triumph— his triumphs and his 

glories V A 1014 

Showing life's triumph R L 402 

fortune of such triumph Son 25 3 

Triumph — Rather than triumph R L 77 

Being had, to triumph Son 52 14 

Triumph in love " 151 8 

would I might triumph so P P VI 10 

Triumphant — With all-triumphant 

splendour Son 38 10 

As his triumphant prize " 151 10 

Triumph' d — Which triumph'd in 

that sky R L 12 

Triumphing — in their faces " 1388 

Trodden — trodden on by many VA 707 

Troilus — here Troilus swounds R L 1486 

Trojan — Stood many Trojan mothers " 1431 



TROJAN 



330 



TRUTH 



Trojan — lie falls, a Trojan bleeds RL 1551 

Troop — muster troops of cares " 720 

To this troop come thou not near P T 8 

Trophy— Tells him of trophies V A 1013 

Hung with the trophies Son 31 10 
' " Lo, all these trophies of affec- 
tions hot L C 218 

Trot— Sometime he trots V A 277 

Troth — human law and common 

troth RL 571 

taste of violated troth " 1059 

and undertake my troth L C 280 

Trouble— such a trouble VA 522 

to overshoot his troubles " 680 

And trouble deaf heaven Son 29 3 

Troubled — as seeming troubled VA 830 

of her troubled brain " ... 1040 

the brain being troubled " 1068 

troubled minds that wake R L 126 

like a troubled ocean " 589 

I may convey this troubled soul " 1176 

Troy — made for Priam's Troy " 1367 

And from the towers of Troy " 1382 

walls of strong-besieged Troy " 1429 

quench Troy that burns so long " 1468 

that burning Troy doth bear " 1474 

And here in Troy " 1476 

Troy had been bright with fame " 1491 

weeps Troy's painted woes " 1492 

Onward to Troy " 1504 

so my Troy did perish " 1547 

to burn his Troy with water " 1561 

Truant— Muse, what shall be Son 101 1 

Truce— Till he take truce - VA 82 

True — true leaders to their queen " 503 

That sometime true news " 658 

makes true men thieves " 724 

True valour still a true respect R L 201 

makes supposed terror true " 455 

the picture of true iiiety " 542 

His true respect will prison " 642 

And my true eyes have never " 748 

Of that true type " 1050 

thy true aft'ection so " 1060 

True grief is fond and testy " 1094 

True sorrow then is feelingly " 1112 

heart-strings to true languishment " ,1141 

true mark of modesty " 1220 

her grief's true quality " 1313 

creatures have a true respect " 1347 

the death of this true wife " 1841 

If the true concord Son 8 5 

And your true rights " 17 11 

O, let me, true in love " 21 9 

your true image pictured lies " 24 6 

that thou mayst true love call " 40 3 

So true a fool is love " 57 13 

Mine own true love " 61 11 

No shape so true " 62 6 

since his rose is true " 67 8 

itself and true " 68 10 

O, lest your true love " 72 9 

In true plain words " 82 12 

' 'Tis so, 'tis true "85 9 

supposing thou art true " 93 1 

and for true things deem'd " 96 8 

Fair, kind, and true " 105 9 

Fair, kind, and true " 105 10 

Fair, kind, and true " 105 13 



True — of my true love control Son 107 3 

figured to thee my true spirit " 108 2 

Alas, 'tis true " 110 1 

Most true it is that I " 110 5 

My most true mind " 113 14 

mine eye saith true " 114 3 

to the marriage of true minds " 116 1 

ere that there was true needing " 118 8 

and find the lesson true " 118 13 

now I find true " 119 9 

how hard true sorrow hits " 120 10 

I will be true " 123 14 

thou suboru'd informer! a true soul " 125 13 

In things right true " 137 13 

no correspondence with true sight " 148 2 

Love's eye is not so true " 148 8 

O, how can Love's eye be true " 148 9 

give the lie to my true sight " 150 3 

many legions of true hearts " 154 fi 

And, true to bondage L C 34 

Than the true gouty landlord " 140 

party is nor true nor kind " 186 

in that my boast is true " 246 

but neither true nor trusty P P 1 2 

her oaths of true love swearing "78 

And in my suit be humble true " 19 32 

How true a twain P T 45 

That are either true or fair " 66 

True-love — Who sees his true-love VA 397 

Truest — the truest sight beguile " 1144 

under truest bars to thrust Son 48 2 

True-sweet — But true-sweet beauty VA 1080 

True-telling— by thy friend Son 82 12 

Truly— by oath they truly honoured JB i 410 

true in love, but truly right Son 21 9 

thy glass will truly show " 77 5 

truly fair wert truly sympathized " 82 11 

And truly not the morning sun " 132 5 

Trumpet — First like a trumpet R L 470 

Herald sad and trumpet be P T 3 

Trust — if there be no self-trust R L 158 

So Priam's trust false Sinon's tears " 1560 

So I, for fear of trust Son 23 5 

in sure wards of trust " 48 4 

best habit is in seeming trust " 138 11 

Serve always with assured trust P P 19 31 

Trust— To trust those tables Son 122 12 

rude, cruel, not to trust "129 4 

Not daring trust the oflice P P 15 4 

Trustless — borne by the .... wings R L 2 

Trusty — but neither true nor trusty P P 1 2 

For of the two the trusty knight " 16 11 

Truth— Love is all truth VA 804 

truth I must confess " 1001 

Then where is truth R L 158 

When Truth and Virtue " 911 

and bring truth to light " 940 

To hide the truth " 1075 

Such signs of truth " 1532 

As truth and beauty Son 14 11 

Thy end is truth's " 14 14 

of less truth than tongue " 17 10 

of thy worth and truth " 37 4 

to break a twofold truth " 41 12 

For truth proves thievish " 48 14 

which truth doth give " 54 2 

by verse distills your truth " 54 14 

rarities of nature's truth " 60 11 

no truth of such account " 62 6 



TRUTH 



331 



TWO 



Truth — simple truth miscall'd sim- 
plicity -Sore G6 11 
Uttering bare truth " 69 4 
Thau niggard truth " 72 8 
To truths translated " 96 8 
For thy neglect of truth " 101 2 
Both truth and beauty " 101 3 
' Truth needs no colour " 101 6 
beauty's truth to lay " 101 7 
that I have look'd on truth " 110 5 
To put fair truth " 137 12 
that she is made of truth " 138 1 
thus is simple truth supprest " 138 8 
from the truth vainly express'd " 147 12 
thy truth, thy constancy " 152 10 
To swear against the truth " 152 14 

in a pride of truth L C 105 

that she is made of truth P P 1 1 

The truth I shall not know " 2 13 
truth in every shepherd's tongue " 20 IS 

Beauty, truth, and rarity P T 53 

Truth may seem, but cannot be " 62 

Truth and beauty buried be " 64 

Try — tries a merciless conclusion B L 1160 

to try an older friend Son 110 11 

how god Mars did try her P P 11 3 
th ough she strive to try her strength " 19 19 

Tumbled — from her be-tumbled 

couch R L 1037 

Tumult— this tumult to behold " 447 

Tune — heavenly tune harsh-sound- 
ing VA 431 

the tempting tune is blown " 778 

quoth she, ' your tunes entomb P L 1121 

To creatures stern sad tunes " 1147 

with thy tongue's tune delighted Son 141 5 

Time— she tunes her tale V A 74 

that tune their memory's joy R L 1107 

Shall tune our heart-strings " 1141 

I'll tune thy woes " 1465 

Tuned— The well-tuned warble " 1080 

of well-tuned sounds Son 8 5 

to list the sad-tuned tale L C 4 

were tuned like the lark PP 15 6 

Tuning — minstrels, .... my defame R L 817 

Turn — than she for this good turn V A 92 

Turn, and return " 704 

Now see what good turns Son 24 9 
doth good turns now unto the other " 47 2 

Turn — He winks, and turns his lips VA 90 

Now which way shall she turn " 253 

began to turn their tide " 979 

Turns not, but swells RL 646 

turn to loathed sours " 867 

Thy honey turns to gall " 889 

pleasure turns to open shame " 890 

And turn the giddy round " 952 

with a joyless smile she turns away " 1711 

turn sourest by their deeds Son 94 13 

And all things turn to fair " 95 12 

from my face she turns my foes " 189 11 

turn back to me " 143 11 

If thou turn back " 143 14 

Or to turn white and swound L C 308 

to turn them both to gain P P 16 10 

Turn'd — now is turn'd to day V A 481 

mine eyes are turn'd " 1072 

And turn'd it thus R L 1539 

to yellow autumn turn'd Son 104 5 



Turn'd— my angel be turn'd fiend .Sore 144 9 

my angel be turn'd fiend PP 2 9 

Turning — and quick in turning V A 140 

and yet she fell a-turning P P 7 16 

Her fancy fell a-turniug " 16 4 

Turning mortal for thy love " 17 18 

Turret — left their round turrets R L 441 

to kiss the turrets bow'd " 1372 

Turtle— Phoenix and the turtle fled P T 23 

'Twixt the turtle and his queen " 31 

That the turtle saw his right " 34 

And the turtle's loyal breast " 57 

Tushes — tushes never sheathed V A 617 

his crooked tushes slay " 624 

Tusk — the tusk in his soft groin " 1116 

Tutor— Thy eyes' shrewd tutor " 500 

O Time, thou tutor RL 995 

Twain — there are but twain VA 123 

if thou wilt have twain " 210 

His face seems twain " 1067 

As if between them twain R L 405 

which of the twain were better " 1154 

that we two must be twain Son 36 1 

how to make one twain " 39 13 

and I love both twain " 42 11 

breaking rings a-twain L 6 

So they loved, as love in twain P T 25 

How true a twain " 45 

'Twas — why, 'twas beautiful and 

hard L C 211 

'Twas not their infirmity PT 60 

'Tween—crusheth 'tween his teeth VA 269 

'Tween frozen conscience R L 247 

Twenty — one long as twenty V A 22 

Is twenty hundred kisses " 522 

under twenty locks " 575 

twenty thousand tongues " 775 

and twenty times, ' Woe, woe " 833 

twenty echoes twenty times " 834 

when I break twenty Son 152 6 

'Twere — As 'twere encouraging R L 1402 

Twice — That twice she doth begin " 567 

You should live twice Son 17 14 

But thou art twice forsworn " 152 2 

And twice desire P P 19 17 

Twiliglit — the twilight of such day Son 73 5 

Twine— twine about her thigh VA 873 

Twining — from her twining arms " 256 

Twinkling— Her handmaids too P £ 787 

Twire — ^When sparkling stars twire 

not Son 28 12 

Twisted— With twisted metal L C 205 

'Twixt — 'Twixt crimson shame V A 76 

'twixt the son and sire " 1160 

As 'twixt a miser .S'ore 75 4 

creep in 'twixt vows " 115 6 

As oft 'twixt May and April L C 102 

be great 'twixt thee and me P P 8 3 

'Twixt the turtle and his queen PT 31 

Two — Two strengthless doves V A 153 

Show'd like two silver doves " 358 

Her two blue windows " 482 

from her two cheeks fair " 957 

Grief hath two tongues " 1007 

behold two Adons dead " 1070 

Lurk'd like two thieves " 1086 

Where, lo, two lamps " 1128 

Two glasses, where herself " 1129 

To those two armies R L 76 



TWO 



332 



UNKINDNESS 



Tivo — Who, having two sweet babes i2 i 1161 

Why her two suns " 1224 

That two red fires " 1353 

In two slow rivers " 1738 

that we two must be twain Son 36 1 

In our two loves " 36 5 

The other two, slight air " 45 1 

made of four, with two alone " '45 7 

where two contracted new " 56 10 

As those two mourning eyes " 132 9 

Two loves I have " 144 1 

Which like two spirits " 144 2 

But why of two oaths' breach " 152 5 

Two loves I have P P 2 1 

That like two spirits "22 

For of the two the trusty knight " 16 11 

Two distincts, division none P T 27 

Neither two nor one was called " 40 

Twofold — to break a twofold truth So7i 41 12 

Type— of that true type R L 1050 

Tyrannize — then most doth tyrannize " 676 

Tyrauuous — Thou art as tyrannous Son 131 1 

Tyranny — subject to the tyranny VA 737 

fearing of Time's tyranny Son 115 9 

Tyrant— the hot tyrant stains VA 797 

Hard-favour'd tyrant " 931 

Or tyrant folly lurk in gentle R L 851 

Will play the tyrants Son 5 3 

this bloody tyrant. Time " 16 2 

When tyrants' crests " 107 14 

And I, a tyrant " 120 7 

Am of myself all tyrant "149 4 

Every fowl of tyrant wing P T 14 

Ugly — ugly, meagre, lean V A 931 

consort with ugly night " 1041 

iigly in her eyes R L 459 

copesmate of ugly Night " 925 

To ugly hell ; when, lo " 1082 

With ugly rack on his Son 33 6 

Ulysses— In Ajax and Ulysses R L 1394 

glance that sly Ulysses lent " 1399 

Unacted — is as a thought unacted " 527 

Unadvised — gives .... wounds " 1^88 

Unapproved — What witness L C 53 

Unapt — unapt to toy VA .34 

Unapt for tender smell R L 695 

Unask'd— thou unask'd shalt have V A 102 

Unaware — as one that unaware " 823 

Sheathed unaware the tusk " 1116 

Unback'd— lo, the unback'd breeder " 320 

Unbent — A brow that seem'd R L 1509 

Unbless — unbless some mother ' Son 3 4 
Unbred— hear this, thou age unbred " 104 13 

Uncertain— The sickly appetite " 147 4 

Uncertainly— sorrow writ R L 1311 

Unclieerful — at Tarquin and un- 

cheerful Night " 1024 

Uncleanness— With your " 193 

Uncoiuiiiered— maiden worlds ... . " 408 

Unconstrained- sports in uncon- 
strained gyves L C 242 

Uncontrolled — his crest V A 104 

quoth he; ' my uncontrolled tide RL 645 

Uncouple — Uncouple at the timor- 
ous flying hare V A 674 

Uncouth— What uncouth ill event R L 1598 

Under — Under her other was VA 32 

Under twenty locks " 575 



Under — Under whose sharp fangs V A 663 

tight brings beauty under " 746 

Under whose simple semblance " 795 

Under whose brim " 1088 

her rosy cheek lies under R L 386 

Under what colour he commits " 476 

Under that colour I am come " 481 

under his insulting falchion " 509 

under the gripe's sharp claws " 543 

under Pyrrhus' proud foot lies '■ 1449 

burning head, each under eye Son 7 2 
under truest bars to thrust " 48 2 

under thee thy poesy disperse " 78 4 

I under my transgression bow " 120 3 

Under the blow of thralled " 124 7 

Under that bond that him " 134 8 

Works under you L C 230 

Under an osier growing P P 6 5 

Under a myrtle shade " 11 2 

Underneath — underneath thy black 

all-hiding cloak R L 801 

Underprop— should .... her fame " 53 

Understood- blushes, aptly L C 200 

Undertake — prefer and .... my troth " 280 

Undeserved — And .... reproach R L 824 

Undistinguished — shrieking undis- 
tinguished woe L C 20 

Undivided — our .... loves are one Son 36 2 

Undone — heart were quite undone V A 783 

Unear'd — so fair whose .... womb Son 3 5 

Unexperient — That the .... gave L C 318 

Unfair — And that which fairly Son 5 4 

Unfiitlier'd — Fortune's bastard be 

unfather'd " 124 2 
and unfather'd fruit " 97 10 
Unfelt — O unfelt sore ! crest-wound- 
ing R L 827 

Unflnisli'd — shapeless and ... . VA 415 

Unfold — with weeping will unfold R L 754 

and there we will unfold " 1146 

Unfolding — By new unfolding Son 52 12 
Unfortunately— in her haste unfor- 
tunately spies V A 1029 

Unfruitful — midst of his unfruit- 
ful prayer R L 344 

Ungrown — the .... fry forbears VA 526 

Uniiallow'd— die, .... thoughts R L 192 

of lewd unhallow'd eyes " 392 

So his unhallow'd haste " 552 

Unhappily — name of 'chaste' un- 
happily set " 8 

faith unhappily forsworn Son 66 4 

Unhappy — to that unhappy guest R L 1565 

Unicorn — To tame the unicorn " 956 

Union — By unions married Son 8 6 

Unity — such unity do hold RL 1558 

Universe — this wide universe I call .^ore 109 13 

Unjust — controls his thoughts .... R L 189 

as servitors to the unjust " 285 

says she not she is unjust Son 138 9 

Unless thy lady prove unjust P P 19 33 

Unjustly — blood so unjustly stained P i 1835 

Unkind — ' young, and so unkind VA 187 

but died unkind " 204 

strangeness, seems unkind " 310 

That you were once unkind Son 120 1 

through my unkind abuse * " 1.34 12 

Let no unkind " 135 13 

Unkindne.ss — ^is . . . . marr'd VA 478 



UNKINDNESS 



333 



UNUSED 



Unkiiidness— by my .... shaken Son 120 5 
That thy unkiiKlness lays " 139 2 

Unkno>Yn — he should keep .... R L 34 

She touch'd no unknown baits " 103 

The fault unknown " 527 

Whose worth's unknown Son 116 8 

frequent been with unknown minds " 117 5 
Unlaced— the warlike god .... me P P \\ 7 
Unlearned — Unlearned in the world's 

false subtleties Son 138 4 

Unless — Unless the earth with thy 

increase be fed V A 170 

Unless it be a boar " 410 

Unless thou couldst return R L 961 

Unless thou yoke thy liking " Ifi33 

imless I took all patiently " 1641 

unless thou get a son Son 7 14 

Unless thou take that honour " 36 12 

unless this miracle have might " 65 13 

Unless you would devise " 72 5 

Unless my nerves were brass " 120 4 

Unless this general evil they main- 
tain " 121 13 
Uulessthy lady prove unjust PP 19 33 

Unletter'd — And, like clerk Son 85 6 

Unlike— Unlike myself thou hear'st F>fl 712 

Unlikely— in thoughts unlikely " 989 

Unlived — now Lucrece is unlived R L 1754 

Unlock'd— Uulock'd the treasure " 16 

Unlook'd— Unlook'd on diest Son 7 14 

Unlook'd for joy " 25 4 

Unlock 'd-for—0 unlook'd-for evil R L 846 

Unloose — . ... it from their bond " 136 

Unmask — To unmask falsehood " 940 

Unmask, dear dear, this " 1602 

Unmatched— the clear unmatched 

red and white " 11 

Unmeet — Vow, alack ! for youth un- 
meet PP 17 13 
Unmoved- Unmoved, cold, and to 

temptation slow Son 94 4 

Unnoted— Gnats are unnoted R L 1014 

Unpeopled— Bare and unpeopled " 1741 

Unperceived — And unperceived fly " 1010 

Unperfect — As an unperfect actor Son 23 1 
Unpractised— Like an unpractised 

swimmer R L 1098 

Unprofitable— sounds, weak " 1017 

Unprovident — art so unprovident Son 10 2 

Unrecalling— let his crime R L 993 

Unrest— bail it from the deep unrest " 1725 

with evermore unrest Smi 147 10 

Unresisted— choked by lust R L 282 

Unrespected — they view things .... Son 43 2 
unwoo'd and unrespected fade " 54 10 

Unripe — Shews thee unripe V A 128 

with my unripe years " 524 

But whether unripe years P P 4 9 

Unrnly—boisterous and .... beast VA 326 

Unruly blasts wait R L 869 

unruly though they be L C 103 

Unsavoury — but unsavoury end V A 1138 

Unseasonable — a poor .... doe R L 581 

Unseeing — When to unseeing eyes Son 43 8 

Unseen — When most unseen R L 676 

To have their unseen sin " 753 

Against the unseen secrecy " 763 

unseen shame " 827 

Was left unseen " 1426 



Unseen — Stealing unseen to west Son 33 8 

prevent our maladies unseen " 118 3 

All unseen 'gan passage find PP 11 6 

Unset— maiden gardens, yet unset Son 16 6 

Unsheathed — thence her soul .... R L 1724 

Unshorn — Like unshorn velvet L C 94 

Unskillful — Unskillful in the 

world's false forgeries P P 1 4 

Unsounded— Let my self R L 1819 

Unspotted— dear love be kept ... . " 821 

Unstained — For unstain'd thoughts " 87 

on her yet unstained bed " 366 

a pure unstained prime Son 70 8 

Unsway'd— Who leaves unsway'd " 141 11 

Unswept — Than unswept stone " 55 4 

Untainted — her mind .... clears RL 1710 

And blood untainted " 1749 

untainted do allow Son 19 11 

Unthrift — Look, what an unthrift "99 

O, none but unthrifts " 13 13 
Unthrifty — Unthrifty loveliness, 

why dost thou spend "41 

Until— Until her husband's welfare RL 263 

Until life's composition Son 45 9 

Untimely — But some .... thought R L 43 

By her untimely tears " 570 

the cause of my untimely death " 1178 

And his untimely frenzy " 1675 

Untimely breathings, sick " 1720 

untimely pluck'd, soon vaded P P 10 1 

Unto — makes amain unto him VA 5 

think it heavy unto thee " 156 

being tied unto a tree " 263 

and neighs unto her " 307 

unto the wood they hie " 323 

woe unto the birds " 455 

hundred touches unto thee " 519 

unto every stranger " 790 

To grow unto himself " 1180 

brought unto his bed RL 120 

Unto a view so false " 292 

unto the chamber door " 337 

Unto a greater uproar " 427 

betray thee unto mine " 483 

Unto the base bed " 671 

I'll bequeath unto the knife " 1184 

cheeks unto her maid seem so " 1217 

unto the clouds bequeathed " 1727 

turns now unto the other Son 47 2 

I have been call'd unto L C 181 

I post unto my pretty P P 15 9 
Unto the silly damsel " 16 8 
Untold — To have their unseen sin re- 
main untold R L 753 

let me pass untold Son 136 9 

Untread— that she untreads again VA 908 

Untrimm'd — changing course .... So7i 18 8 

Untrue — speak well of me untrue " 72 10 

thus maketh mine untrue " 113 14 

"This man's untrue LC 169 

Untuck'd — For some, , descended " 31 

Untuned — With untuned tongue R L 1214 

Untutor'd — think me some untu- 

tor'd youth Son 138 3 

think me some untutor'd youth P P 1 3 

Unused — Thy unused beauty Son 4 13 

And kept unused " 9 12 

an eye unused to flow " 30 5 

it might unused stay " 48 3 



UNWEAVE 



334 



UPON 



Unweaye — Now she unweaves the 

web VA 991 

Unwed — Neither too young nor yet 

unwed PP 19 6 

Unwelcome — that sour .... guest VA 449 

Unwholesome — unwholesome truths 

make sick JS L 779 

Unwholesome weeds take root " 870 

Unwilling — wilful and unwilling VA 365 

threw unwilling light " 1051 

As each unwilling portal S L 309 

Unwisely — unwisely did not let " 10 

Unwitnessed — . . . . with eye or ear V A 1023 

Unwoo'd — They live unwoo'd and 

unrespected Son 54 10 

Unworthiness — If thy unworthiness " 150 13 

Unworthy— Of that unworthy wife R L 1304 

Unyielding — from my .... heart VA 423 

Up — The steed is .stalled up " 39 

hold up thy head " 118 

She heaveth up his hat " 351 

stirs up a desperate courage " 556 

eats up Love's tender spring " 656 

dries up his oil " 756 

From his moist cabinet mounts up 

on high " 854 

Wreathed up in fatal folds " 879 

cheering up her senses " 896 

draws up her breath " 929 

smother'd up in shade " 1035 

A purple flower sprung up " 1168 

Her joy with heaved-up hand R L Ill 

had closed up mortal eyes " 163 

And therein heartens up his ser- 

Tile powers " 295 

Stuff up his lust, as minutes fill 

up hours " 297 

pluck'd up the latch " 358 

cheers up his burning eye " 435 

breaks ope her loek'd-up eyes " 446 

to death, rise up and fall " 466 

cited up in rhymes " 524 

He rouseth up himself " 541 

my heaved-up hands appeal " 638 

Shame folded up in blind conceal- 
ing night " 675 

that coffers up his gold " 855 

To eat up errors " 937 

'Madam, ere I was up " 1277 

Here folds she up the tenour of 

her woe " 1310 

"Wagg'd up and down " 1406 

which purl'd up to the sky " 1407 

Which seem'd to swallow up his 

sound advice " 1409 

To jump up higher seem'd " 1414 

voice damm'd up with woe " 1661 

his breath drinks up again " 1666 

till it blow up rain " 1788 

Lifts up his burning head Son 7 2 

the steep-up heavenly hill "75 

all girded up in sheaves " 12 7 

I summon up remembrance " 30 2 

lock'd up in any chest " 48 9 

To tie up envy evermore " i 70 12 

that seals up all in rest " 73 8 

will hold me up afloat " 80 9 

countenance fill'd up his line " 86 13 

eat him up to death " 99 13 



Up — Drink up the monarch's plague Son 114 2 

most kingly drinks it up " 114 10 

reckon up their own " 121 10 

built up with newer might " 123 2 

Eat up thy charge " 146 8 

votary took up that flre " 154 5 

But yield them up L C 221 

dried up the dewy morn P P 6 1 

Up-lieareth — faintly she .... V A 482 

Uphold — in honour might uphold Son 13 10 
Up-locked — to his sweet up-locked 

treasure " 52 2 

Upon — Upon this promise V A 85 

' The tender spring upon thy 

tempting lip " 127 

trip upon the green " 146 

seize love upon thy left " 158 

'Upon the earth's increase why 

shouldst thou feed " 169 

dwells upon my suit " 205 

Upon his compass'd crest now 

stand on end " 272 

He looks upon his love " 307 

beams upon his hairless face are 

flx'd " 487 

spread upon the blushing rose " 590 

blood upon the fresh flowers being 

shed " 665 

far off upon a hill " 697 

comment upon every woe " 714 

Upon fresh beauty, blotting " 796 

Leaves Love upon her back " 814 

Gazing upon a late-embarked friend " 818 

Upon the wide wound " 1052 

Upon his hurt she looks " 1063 

He ran upon the boar " 1112 

She looks upon his lips " 1123 

upon their whiteness stood " 1170 

Upon the world dim darkness 

doth display R L 118 

Now stole upon the time " 162 

to work upon his wife " 235 

yet remains upon her breast " ' 463 

sets his foot upon the light " 673 

Upon my cheeks what helpless 

shame I feel " 756 

upon his silver down will stay " 1012 

gazed upon with every eye " 1015 

as frets upon an instrument " 1140 

Gazing upon the Greeks " 1384 

break upon the galled shore " 1440 

Upon his head that hath " 1481 

still rest upon record " 1643 

weep upon the tainted place " 1746 

served a dumb arrest upon his 

tongue " 1780 

struck his hand upon his breast " 1842 

Upon thyself thy beauty's legacy Son 4 2 

war upon this bloody tyrant " 16 2 

And look upon myself " 29 4 

Upon the farthest earth " 44 6 

Upon the hours " 57 2 

lives upon his gains " 67 12 

you look upon this verse " 71 9 

hang more praise upon deceased I " 72 7 

Upon those bows which shake " 73 3 

did call upon thy aid " 79 1 

upon your soundless deep doth ride " 80 10 

upon misprision growing " 87 11 



UPON 



335 



VALLEY-FOUNTAIN 



Upon — Upon thy side against myself 

I'll fight Son 88 3 

Upon thy part I can set down a 

story " 88 6 

comment upon that offence " 89 2 

set a form upon desired change " 89 6 
For it depends upon that love " 92 4 

stamp'd upon my brow " 112 2 

and upon me proved " IIG 13 

upon your dearest love to call " 117 3 

thou dost foist upon us " 123 6 

Upon that blessed wood " 128 2 

Looking with pretty ruth upon 

my pain " 132 4 

put fair truth upon so foul a face " 137 12 
lays upon my heart " 139 2 

upon thy fading mansion spend " 146 6 
live thou upon thy servant's loss " 146 9 
that I do fawn upon " 149 6 

Eevenge upon myself " 149 8 

Upon her head a platted hive L C 8 

Upon whose weeping m argent " 39 

slides he down upon his grained bat " 64 

Upon his lips their silken parcels 

hurls " 87 

was yet upon his chin " 92 

curb it upon other's proof " 163 

And long upon these terras I held " 176 

Upon the moment " 248 

Upon the lute doth ravish P P 8 6 

upon a steep-up hill " 9 5 

that hangs upon a tree " 10 5 

There will we sit uison the rocks " 20 5 
As it fell upon a day " 21 1 

Made me think upon my own " 21 18 

Up-prick'(l — His ears up-prick'd VA 271 

Uprear— against myself uprear Son 49 11 

Upright — Anon he rears upright VA 279 

Uproar — Unto a greater uproar P L 427 

Up-till — Lean'd her breast up-till a 

thorn PP 21 10 

Urchin-snouted — and boar VA llOo 

Ursje — arms doth urge releasing " 256 

we our palate urge Soti, 118 2 

urge not my amiss " 151 3 

Urged — ' What have you urged VA 787 

protestation urged the rest P L 1844 

Urgetli — she with vehement prayers 

urgeth still " 475 

still urgeth such extremes " 1337 

Urging — Urging the worser sense " 249 

Urn — To this urn let those repair P T 65 

Us— let us part VA 421 

Do summon us to part " 534 

torments us with defect P L 151 

Her wrongs to us " 1840 

let us divided live Son 39 5 

What thou dost foist upon us " 123 6 

By blunting us to make our wits L C 161 

your victory us all congest " 258 

known to us poor swains PP 18 45 

sport from us is fled " 18 47 

Use — Make use of time VA 129 

fresh beauty for the use " 164 

gold that's put to use " 768 

sorrow should'his use control P L 1781 

deserved thy beauty's use Son 2 9 

That use is not forbidden "65 

thy love's use their treasure " 20 14 



Use— That to my use it might Son 48 3 

every alien pen hath got my use " 73 3 
that put'st forth all to use " 134 10 

Use — and use good dealing VA 514 

thus to use it in the fight P L 62 

when he cannot use it " 862 

why dost thou use Son 4 7 

for ornament doth use " 21 3 
spirit doth use your name " 80 2 

words which writers use " 82 3 

If thou wouldst use the strength " 96 12 

use rigour in my gaol " lys 12 

Use power with power " 139 4 

should use like loving charms PP 11 8 

Use his company no more " 21 50 

Used — How Tarquin must be used P L 1195 

Was used in giving gentle doom Son 145 7 

Which, used, lives " 4 14 

might be better used " 82 13 

The hardest knife, ill used " 95 14 

Adon used to cool his spleen P P 6 6 

That nothing could be used " 16 10 

Useless — And .... barns the harvest P L 859 

User — the user so destroys it So7i 9 12 

Usest — for my love thou usest " 40 6 

Usher — that ushers in the even " 132 7 
Usurer — Profitless usurer, why dost 

thou use "47 

Thou usurer, that put'st forth all 

to use " 134 10 

Usurp — Usurps her cheek VA 591 

Usurp'd — on earth usurp'd his name " 794 

Usurper — Who, like a foul usurper P L 412 

Usury — use is not forbidden usury Son 6 5 

Like usury, applying wet to wet L C 40 

Utmost— hath cast his utmost sum Son 49 3 

Utter— My tongue shall utter all P L 1076 

She utters this: ' He, he, fair lords " 1721 

Uttering — and uttering foolish things " 1813 

Uttering bare truth Son 69 4 

Tacant— The vacant leaves Son 77 3 

Vade — When that shall vade " 54 14 

Vaded — untimely pluck'd, soon .. ..PP 10 1 

and vaded in the spring " 10 2 

Lost, vaded, broken " 13 6 

vaded gloss no rubbing will refresh " 13 8 

Vadeth — gloss that vadeth suddenly " 13 2 

Vail— He vails his tail VA 314 

Vail'd — She vail'd her eyelids " 956 

Vain — But all in vain " 607 

is bestow'd in vain " 771 

And all in vain you strive " 772 

'In vain I rail at Opportunity P L 1023 

In vain I cavil " 1025 

In vain I spurn " 1026 

' In vain,' quoth she, ' I live, and 

seek in vain " 1044 

he strives in vain " 1665 

a vain and doubtful good P P 13 1 

thou mourn'st in vain " 21 19 

Vainly — Thus vainly thinking Son 138 5 

from the truth vainly express'd " 147 12 
Thus vainly thinking PP 1 5 

Vale— from a sistering vale L C 2 

Valiant — makes her absence valiant " 245 

Valley — hills and valleys, dales and 

fields PP 20 3 

Valley-fountain — In a cold .... Son. 153 4 



VALOUR 



336 



VIEW 



Valour — Put fear to valour VA 1158 

True valour still a true respect " 201 

Vanish'd— his loathed delight R L 742 

of many a vanish'd sight Son 30 8 

or vanish'd out of sight " 63 7 

Vanishetli— through her lips, so .... iJ i 1041 

Vanishing — Are .... or vanish'd Bon G3 7 

Vanity — Thy violent vanities R L 894 

Vanquisli'd— captive doth yield " 75 

Like a thousand vanquish'd men P P 18 36 

Vantage — having thee at vantage V A 635 

sense for vantage still R L 249 

Doing thee vantage, douhle-van- 

tage me Son 88 12 

Vapour — Like misty vapours V A 184 

vapours doth he send " 274 

melted like a vapour " 1166 

Which blows these pitchy vapours R L 550 

misty vapours march so thick " 782 

and breath a vapour is P P 3 9 

Exhale this vapour vow " 3 11 

Vaporous — . . . . and foggy Night R L 771 

Variable— variable passions throng V A 967 

Variation — So far from variation Son 76 2 

Variety — pale with fresh variety VA 21 

Varying— varying to other words Son 105 10 
Vassal — Obdurate vassals, fell ex- 
ploits R L 429 

From vassal actors " 608 

low vassals to thy state " 666 

the duteous vassal scarce is gone " 1360 

Being your vassal Son 58 9 

and vassal wretch to be " 141 12 

Vassalage — to whom in vassalage " 26 1 

Vast — Vast sin-concealing chaos R L 767 

Vastly— like a late-sack'd island, 

vastly stood " 1740 

Vanity— And in her vaulty prison " 119 

Vaunt — Vaunt in their youthful sap Son 15 7 
Vehement— But she with vehement 

prayers R L 475 

Veil— ' Bonnet nor veil VA 1081 

beauty's veil doth cover Son 95 ll 

Veil'd— And, veil'd in them L C 312 

Vein— Her azure veins R L 419 

uproar tempts his veins " 427 

Whose ranks of blue veins " 440 

changed to black in every vein " 1454 

to blush through lively veins Son 67 10 

In my love's veins " 99 5 

Vein'd — These blue-vein'd violets V A 125 

Velvet — Like unshorn velvet L C 94 

Through the velvet leaves P P 11 5 

Venge— tovengethis wrongof mineP i 1691 

Vengeful — A .... canker eat him up Son 99 13 

Venom— His venom in eflect R L 532 

fair founts with venom mud " 850 

Venom'd— 'Gainst veuom'd sores V A 916 

Vent— Free vent of words " 334 

Through little vents and crannies R L 310 

To make more vent for passage " 1040 

Venture — on the lion he will V A 628 

Venturing— compass'd oft with " 567 

So that in venturing ill R L 148 

Venus— Sick-thoughted Venus VA 5 

and by Venus' side " 180 

'Ay me,' quoth Venus " 187 

to swallow Venus' liking " 248 

in the night from Venus' eye " 816 



Venus — Venus salutes him 

poor Venus noteth 

From Venus' doves doth challenge 

Venus with young Adonis 
Verbal — Make verbal repetition 
Verdict — And by their verdict is de- 
termined 

On this side the verdict went 
Verdure — their verdure still endure 
Vermillion— Nor praise the deep . . . 
Verse — Who will believe my verse 

My love shall in my verse 

beauty to his verse 

that pour'st into my verse 

by verse distills your truth 

in hope my verse shall stand 

you look ujjon this verse 

Why is my verse so barren 

such fair assistance in my verse 

My verse alone had all, 

shall be my gentle verse 

full sail of his great verse 

my verse astonished 

to no other pass my verses tend 

than in my verse can sit 

my verse to constancy confined 
Very — nothing but the very smell 

shrieks, — 'tis very late 

in the very lists of love 

The very eyes of men 

tyrants to the very same 

The very part was consecrate 

At first the very worst 

the verj' birds are mute 

say o'er the very same 

and proved, a very woe 

the very refuse of thy deeds 
Vestal — Love-lacking vestals 

makest the vestal violate her oath 
Vex — Thou canst not vex me 

am I that vex thee still 
Vexation — The deep vexation 

Vex'd — That is so with watchinj 

Vial — Make sweet some vial 
Vice — When thus thy vices bud 

With inward vice 

For canker vice 

have those vices got 

If he be addict to vice 
Victor — A captive victor that hath 

and both shall victors be 

or victor being charged 

As victors, of my silence 

was victor of the day 
Victory — His victories, his tri- 
umphs 

arms and wreaths of victory 

After a thousand victories 

Must for your victory 
View — wistly to view 

as murder'd with the view 

So, at his bloody view 

Their view right on 

Unto a view so false 

to my sightless view 

more blest may be the view 

a motley to the view 

Who, in despite of view 

though I mistake my view 



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VIEW 



337 



WAKE 



Vietv — disturbed, heedfully doth 

view H L 454 

To view thy present trespass " 632 

with each thing she views " 1101 

The precedent whereof in Lucrece 

view " 1261 

I loved, I view in thee Son 31 13 

they view things unrespected " 43 . 2 

that the world's eye doth view " 69 1 

View'd — view'd each otlier's sorrow VA 963 

Which Tarquin view'd R L 72 

wherein they view'd their faces " 1526 

Viewest — and tell the face thou .... Son 3 1 

A''iewing — that's worth the viewing V A 1076 

Vigour — for thy mortal vigour " 953 

Tile — digression is so vile, so base RL 202 

this vile purpose to prevent " 220 

That what is vile " 252 

how vile a spectacle it were " 631 

How comes it then, vile Opportu- 
nity " 895 

From this vile world Son 71 4 

to be vile than vile esteemed " 121 1 

Vilest — with vilest worms to dwell " 71 4 

Villiiiii — The homely .... court'sies R L 1338 

Vine — who will the vine destroy " 215 

Violate — the vestal violate her oath " 883 

Violated — taste of violated troth " 1059 

Violent — Thy .... vanities can never " 894 

the violent roaring tide " 1667 

Violet — These blue-vein'd violets V A 125 

smell to the violet " 936 

the violet past prime Son 12 3 

The forward violet " 99 1 

Virgin — by a virgin hand disarm'd " 154 8 

Virtue— Their virtue lost VA 1131 

beauty and virtue strived R L 52 

When virtue bragg'd, beauty 

would " 54 

Virtue would stain o'er " 56 

Then virtue claims from beauty " 59 

which virtue gave the golden age " 60 

beautj''s red and virtue's white " 65 

Thus dying virtue " 223 

And talk'd of virtue " 846 

When virtue is profaned " 847 

What virtue breeds " 872 

When Truth and Virtue " 911 

sin's pack-horse, virtue's snare " 928 

But, for their virtue Son 54 9 

virtue rudely strumpeted " 66 6 

He lends thee virtue " 79 9 

such virtue hath my pen " 81 13 

If thy sweet virtue " 93 14 

virtue of your love " 117 14 

and thy dear virtue hate " 142 1 

Virtuous — shows like a deed R L 252 

Where like a virtuous monument " 391 

With virtuous wish Son 16 7 

devise some virtuous lie " 72 5 

And prove thee virtuous " 88 4 

Visage— his visage hide " 33 7 

Which fortified her visage L C 9 

For on his visage " 90 

Yet show'd his visage " ..... 96 

Vision — Nor his own vision holds Son 113 8 

Visit — to come and visit me R L 1307 

Voice — churlish, harsh in voice VA 134 

Thy mermaid's voice " 429 

22 



Voice — volleys out his voice V A 921 

it is Adonis' voice " 973 

Her voice is stojip'd " 106I 

her voice controll'd R L 678 

and voice damm'd up with woe " 16C1 

All tongues the voice of souls Son 69 3 

Of others' voices " 112 10 

this double voice accorded L C 3 

thy voice his dreadful thunder PP 5 11 

Volley — volleys out his voice V A 921 

Vomit — must vomit his receipt RL 703 

Votary — The fairest votary took up Son 154 5 

Vouclisafe — Vouchsafe, thou wonder F^ 13 

next vouchsafe t' afford R L 1305 

O then vouchsafe me Son 32 9 

Not once vouchsafe to hide " 135 6 

Vow — Dismiss your vows V A 425 

breach of holy wedlock vow R L 809 

the fatal knife to end his vow " 1843 

And that deep vow " 1847 

Creep in 'twixt vows Son 115 6 

In act thy bed-vow broke " 152 3 

For all my vows are oaths " 152 7 

Knew vows were ever brokers L C 173 

of my holy vows afraid " 179 

All vows and consecrations " 263 

vow, bond, nor space " 264 

Vows for thee broke P P Z 4 

My vow was earthly "37 

My vow was breath * "39 

Exhale this vapour vow " 3 11 

Vow, alack ! for youth unmeet " 17 13 

Voiv — That now he vows a league R L 287 

That he may vow " 1179 

against myself I'll vow Son 89 13 

This I do vow " 123 13 

Vowed — th at vow'd chaste life to keep " 154 3 

if not to beauty vowed PP 5 2 

Vowing — In vowing new hate Son 152 4 

Vulgar — For every vulgar paper " 38 4 

prey of every vulgar thief " 48 8 

Which vulgar scandal " 112 2 

Vulture — Whose vulture thought VA 551 

feeds his vulture folly R L 556 

Wagg'd— Wagg'd up and down R L 1405 

Wail— To wail his death VA 1017 

to wail a week RL 213 

beggar wails his case " 711 

wail the abusing of his time " 994 

The world will wail thee Son 9 4 

new wail my dear time's waste " 30 4 

Wail'd— must be wail'd by Collatine i2 i 1799 

Wailing — begins a wailing note V A 835 

calm look, eyes wailing still R L 1508 

is of my wailing chief Son 42 3 
Waist — girdle with embracing flames 

the waist R L 6 

Wait — wit waits on fear V A 690 

wait on wrinkled age R L 275 

wait .on the tender spring " 8S9 

wait on them as their pages " 910 

scandal waits on greatest state " 1006 

I am to wait Son 58 13 

his pleasures wait on thee " 97 11 

Waited— It shall be waited on V A 1137 

Waiting — though waiting so be hell Son 58 13 

Wake — And wakes the morning V A 855 

and troubled minds that wake R L 126 



WAKE 



338 



WAS 



Wake — wakes to stain and kill It L 168 

Will he not wake " 219 

She wakes her heart " 759 

To wake the morn " 942 

thou dost wake elsewhere Son 61 13 

still did wake and sleep L C 123 

If thou wake, he cannot sleep P P 21 54 

Waken'd — in your waken'd hate Son 117 12 

Waking — by dreadful fancy .... R L 450 

Yet, foul night-waking eat " 554 

To keep thy sharp woes waking " 1136 

but waking no such matter Son 87 14 

Walk — curtains being close, about 

he walks B L 367 

Be absent from thy walks Son 89 9 

thy fingers walk with gentle gait " 128 11 

My mistress, when she walks " 130 12 

Walk'd— the lion walk'd along VA 1093 

Wall — to batter such an ivory wall R L 464 

batter'd down her consecrated wall " 723 

Through crystal walls " 1251 

the walls of strong-besieged Troy. " 1429 

pent in walls of glass Son 5 10 

Painting thy outward walls " 146 4 

Wander— the souls that by him R L 882 

to make me wander thither P P 14 10 

Wander, a word for shadows " 14 11 

Wanderer— as night-wanderers of- 
ten are VA 825 

Wander'st — thou .... in his shade Son 18 11 

Wandering — Night-wandering wea- 
sels shriek RL 307 

a wandering wasp hath crept " 839 

to every wandering bark Son 116 7 

Wane — As fast as thou shalt wane " 11 1 

Waning — wealth and ease in waning 

age R L 142 

Who hast by waning grown Son 126 3 

Want — how .... of love tormenteth V A 202 

which their superiors want R L 42 

and all, for want of wit " 153 

to want his bliss " 389 

drowns for want of skill " 1099 

nothing wants to answer " 1459 

cunning want to grace their art Son 24 13 

want subject to invent " 38 1 

Want nothing that the thought " 69 2 

No want of conscience " 151 13 

Where want cries some, but L C 42 

unripe years did want conceit P P 4 9 

No man will supply thy want " 21 3S 

Wanteth — so wauteth in his store R L 97 

that even in plenty wanteth " 557 

Wanting — Wanting the spring " 1455 

in wanting words to show it Son 26 6 

this fair gift in me is wanting " 87 7 

manner of my pity-wanting pain " 140 4 

Wanton — to toy, to wanton V A 106 

the wanton mermaid's songs " 777 

to your wanton talk " 809 

moralize his wanton sight R L 104 

' This glove to wanton tricks " ..... 320 

O modest wantons! wanton modesty " 401 

Bearing the wanton burthen Son 97 7 

Playing in the wanton air P P 11 4 

Wantonly— and play as wantonly Son 54 7 

Wantonness— Some say, thy fault is 

youth, some wantonness " 96 1 

War — direful god of war VA 98 



War — what a war of looks V A 

It shall be cause of war " 

This silent war of lilies R L 

Make war against proportiou'd 

course of time " 

in peace is wounded, not in war " 
And all in war with Time Son 

Make war upon this bloody tyrant " 
Such civil war is in my love and 

hate " 

are at a mortal war " 

When wasteful war shall statues " 
nor war's quick fire shall burn " 

War — The wind wars with his torch R L 
Sweets with sweets war not Son 

Warble— The well-tuned warble R L 
AVard — by him enforced, retires his 
ward " 

in sure wards of trust Son 

in thy steel bosom's ward " 

Wardrobe — Or as the wardrobe " 

Warlike — hard news from the war- 
like band R L 
' the warlike god embraced me P P 
' the warlike god unlaced me " 
Warm — 'The sun that shines from 
heaven shines but warm V A 
Welcomes the warm approach " 
The warm effects " 
And see thy blood warm Son 
Warm'd — legions of true hearts had 
warm'd " 
my heart so much as warm'd L C 
that is not warmed here " 

Warning — Give to the world Son 

Warrant — warrant for blame R L . 

Warrantise — strength and warran- 

tise of skill Son 

Warrior — The painful .... famoused " 
Wary — be of thyself so wary " 

Was — Under her other was the ten- 
der boy VA . 
So soon was she along as he was 

down 
Yet was he servile 
what he was controlled with 
his fury was assuaged 
0, what a sight it was 
now her cheek was pale 
Now was she just before him 
a war of looks was then between 

them 
life was death's annoy 
death was lively joy 
was it not white 
Her song was tedious 
It was not that she eall'd him 
how much a fool was I 
was but late forlorn 
that his wound wept, was drench'd 
No flower was nigh 
When he was by 
thus was Adonis slain 
Was melted like a vapour 
this was thy father's guise 
unto himself was his desire 
Here was thy father's bed 
Well was he welcomed R L 

in Lucrece' face was seen " 



355 

1159 

71 

774 

831 

13 

2 

12 
1 

5 

7 

311 

2 

1080 

303 
4 
9 
10 

255 
5 



150 
25 



193 

386 

605 

14 

6 
191 
292 

3 

620 

7 
9 
9 

32 

43 
112 
270 
318 
343 
347 
349 

355 
497 
498 
643 
841 
993 
1015 
1026 
1054 
1055 
1101 
1111 
1166 
1177 
1180 
1183 
51 
64 



WAS 



339 



WATCH 



Was — was the other queen R L 66 

Without the bed her other fair 

hand was " 393 

■was it newly bred " 490 

For it was lent thee " 627 

was pure to Collatine " 826 

was too weak " 865 

he was stay'd by thee " 917 

I was a loyal wife " 1048 

thy interest was not bought " 1067 

which was the dearer " 1163 

to myself was nearer " 1165 

How was I overseen " 1206 

'Madam, ere I was up " 1277 

Myself was stirring " 1280 

was Tarquin gone away " 1281 

God wot, it was defect " 1345 

in this work was had " 1385 

the painter was so nice " 1412 

imaginary work was there " 1422 

Was left unseen, save " 1426 

Of what she was " 1453 

The painter was no god " 1461 

in Sinon's was abused " 1529 

the picture was belied " 1533 

Mine enemy was strong " 1646 

That was not forced ; that never 

was inclined " 1657 

For she that was thy Lucrece " 1682 

' That life was mine " 1752 

what once I was " 1764 

' Tarquin ' was pronounced " 1786 

for she was only mine " 1798 

' She was my wife " 1802 

with the Eoraans was esteemed so " 1811 

nor no remembrance what it was Son 5 12 

he was but one hour mine " 33 11 

All mine was thine " 40 4 

How careful was I " 48 1 

from the thing it was " 49 7 

in character was done " 59 8 

what beauty was of yore " 68 14 

slander's mark was ever yet the fair " 70 2 

which it was nourish'd by " 73 12 

part was consecrate to thee " 74 6 
The worst was this ; my love was 

my decay " 80 14 

Was it the proud full sail " 86 1 

Was it his spirit " 86 5 

I was not sick " 86 12 

time removed was summer's time " 97 5 

Our love was new " 102 5 

When I was wont to greet " 102 6 

that before was well " 103 10 

was beauty's summer dead " 104 14 

that I was false of heart " 109 1 

When I was certain " 115 11 

that there was true needing " 118 8 

from me was I bold " 122 11 

No, it was builded " 124 5 

black was not counted " 127 1 

that I was thy ' Will " 136 2 

Was used in giving gentle doom " 145 7 

Was sleeping by a virgin hand " 154 8 

weeping margent she was set L C 39 

it was to gain my grace " 79 

She was new lodged " 84 

on his visage was in little drawn " 90 

thinks in Paradise was sawn " 91 



Was— was yet upon his chin L C 92 

If best were as it was " 98 

For maiden-tongued he was " 100 

was he such a storm " 101 

And was my own fee-simple " 144 

to none was ever said " 180 

but ne'er was harmed " 194 

but mine own was free " 195 

why, 'twas beautiful and hard " 211 

was sent me from a nun " 232 

For she was sought " 236 

My vow was earthly P P 3 7 

My vow was breath "39 

Hot was the day "67 

' why was not I a flood " 6 14 

Was this a lover " 7 17 

Fair was the morn "91 

' here was the sore " 9 12 

It was a lording's daughter " 16 1 

Long was the combat doubtful " 16 5 

alas, it was a spite " 16 7 

more mickle was the pain " 16 9 

was wounded with disdain " 16 11 

was victor of the day " 16 13 

Love, whose month was ever May " 17 2 

faith was firmly fix'd in love " IS 11 

Thy like ne'er was " IS 50 

That to hear it was great pity " 21 12 

Number there in love was slain P T 28 

Distance and no space was seen " 30 

Either was the other's mine " 36 

Property was thus appalled " 37 

That the self was not the same " 38 

Neither two nor one was called " 40 

It was married chastity " 61 

Wash— To wash the foul face VA 983 

wash the slander of my ill JR L 1207 

Wasli'd — cheeks over-wash'd with 

woe " 1225 

Wasp— a wandering hath crept " 839 

Wast— Thou wast begot VA 168 

And wast afeard to scratch R L 1035 

Where thou wast wont " 1621 

Thou wast not to this end " 1755 

Waste — I'll waste in sorrow VA 583 

And waste huge stones RL 959 

how thy precious minutes waste Son 11 2 

faster than Time wastes life " 100 13 

Waste — makest waste in uiggarding " 1 12 

But beauty's waste " 9 11 

among the wastes of time " 12 10 

my dear time's waste " 30 4 

more short than waste or ruining " 125 4 

in a waste of shame " 129 1 

Waste — to these waste blanks " 77 10 

Wasted — wasted in such time-be- 
guiling VA 24 

should not be wasted " 130 

wasted, thaw'd, and done " 749 

the chronicle of wasted time Son 106 1 

Wasteful— wasteful Time debateth " 15 11 

When wasteful war " 55 5 

Wasting — Poor .... monuments R L 798 

Wat^'By this, poor Wat VA 697 

Watch — mine eyes to watch " 584 

And they that watch R L 1575 

watch the clock for you Son 57 6 

For thee watch I " 61 13 

Watch— Rase watch of woes R L 928 



WATCH 



340 



WEAKLY 



Watch — My heart doth charge the 

watch PP 15 2 

IVatcliing— Thatissovex'dwith Son 148 9 

Watchman — To play the watchman " 61 12 

Watchword— Which gives the ... . JR L 370 

Water — She bathes in water VA 94 

in water seen by night " 492 

As air and water " 654 

stones dissolved to water R L 592 

And grave like water " 755 

no water thence proceeds " 1552 

to burn his Troy with water " 1561 

of earth and water wrought Son 44 11 

bring water for my stain " 109 8 

The sea, all water " 135 9 

Love's fire heats water, water cools " 154 14 

That flame through water X C 287 

to water will not wear " 291 

or of weeping water " 304 

Water-drops — huge stones with 

little water-drops E L 959 

Water-srall — These water-galls in 

her dim element " 1588 

Watery — swan in her watery nest " 1611 

a watery rigol goes " 1745 

some watery token shows " 1748 

win of the watery main Son 64 7 

his watery eyes he did dismount X C 281 

Wave — peering through a wave VA 86 

wave like feather'd wings " 306 

Till the wild waves " 819 

Whose waves to imitate P £ 1438 

Like as the waves make Son 60 1 

Waved — AVho in a salt-waved ocean P £ 1231 

AVavering- — wavering stood in doubt P C 97 

Wax — What wax so frozen VA 565 

No more than wax P L 1245 

Softer than wax P P 7 4 

Waxen — Whereat a waxen torch P L 178 

men have marble, women waxen, 

minds " 1240 

From lips new-waxen pale " 1663 

Waxotli — never waxeth strong VA 420 

Wax-red— on my wax-red lips " 516 

W'siy — his lips another way . " 90 

which way shall she turn " 253 

a thousand ways he seeks " 477 

whate'er is in his way " 623 

indenting with the way ' " 704 

discovery of her way " 828 

the bushes in the way " 871 

just in his way " 879 

This way she runs " 905 

bear her a thousand ways " 907 

unwilling portal yields him way P L 309 

force must work mj' way " 513 

thou didst teach the way " 630 

seated from the way " 1144 

determining which way to fly " 1150 

tread the way out readily " 1152 

to mourn some newer way " 1365 

and look another way Son 7 12 

do not you a mightier way " 16 1 

o'ertake me in my way " 34 3 

should not stop my way " 44 2 

when I took my way " 48 1 

do I journey on the way " .50 1 

by-past perils in her way i C 158 

And to her will frame all thy waysPP 19 25 



Wayward — to the wayward boy VA 344 

Who wayward once P L 1095 

We — whereon we lean VA 125 

know not what we mean " 126 

shall we meet to-morrow " 585 

Say, shall we? shall we " 586 

all for one we gage P L 144 

venturing ill we leave to be " 148 

The things we are for that which 

we expect " 149 

we have; so then we do " 152 

The thing we have " 153 

that on lawn we lay " 258 

The sweets we wish for " 867 

that we call them ours " 868 

We have no good that we can say 

is ours " .V... 873 
Will we find out; and there we 

will vmfold " 1146 

of sorrow that we hear " 1328 

that we may give redress " 1603 

We are their offspring " 1757 

the Capitol that we adore " 1835 

We will revenge the death " 1841 

creatures we desire increase Son 1 1 

that we two must be twain "36 1 

yet we must not be foes " 40 14 

in every blessed shape we know " 53 12 

but fairer we it deem " 54 3 

Whether we are mended " 59 11 

For we, which now behold " 106 13 
with eager compounds we our 

palate urge " 118 2 
We sicken to shun sickness when 

we purge "118 4 

and therefore we admire " 123 5 

we before have heard them " 123 8 

and what we see doth lie " 123 11 

with ease we prove , " 136 7 

by lies we flatter'd be " 138 14 

For when we rage L C 160 

That we must curb it " 162 

The thing we have not " 240 

we will all the pleasures prove P P 20 2 

There will we sit upon the rocks " 20 5 

Weak — weak and silly mind VA 1016 

shall it make most weak " 1145 

past reason's weak removing P P 243 

are the weak brain's forgeries " 460 

the weak mouse panteth " 555 

To whose weak ruins muster " 720 

In thy weak hive " 839 

Their father was too weak " 865 

Unprofitable sounds, weak arbi- 
trators " 1017 

The weak oppress'd " 1242 

my poor self weak " 1646 

Weak words, so thick come " 1784 

from weak minds proceeds " 1825 

lends but weak relief Son 34 11 

though more weak in seeming " 102 1 

Weak sights their sickly radiance L C 214 

age is weak and old PP 12 7 

Weak-huilt— Though hopes P L 130 

Weaken — Whose strength's abun- 
dance weakens his own heart Son 23 4 

Weaker — And far the weaker P L 1647 

Weaklings — Myself a weakling " 584 

Weakly — Are weakly fortress'd " 28 



WEAK-MADE 



341 



WELL 



Weak-made — Make women BL 1260 ] 

Weakness — with cold-pale VA 892 

With mine own weakness ' Son 88 5 

Weal— Thy weal and woe VA 987 

Wealth — What priceless wealth R L 17 

honour, wealth, and ease in waning 

age " 142 

Honour for wealth ; and oft that 

wealth doth cost " 146 

thy sweet love remember'd such 

wealth brings Son 29 13 
birth, or wealth, or wit " 37 5 
to show what wealth she had " 67 13 
'twixt a miser and his wealth " 75 4 
Some in their wealth " 91 2 
Richer than wealth " 91 10 
Of wealth, of filial fear L C 270 

Weapon — bright weapons wield It L 1432 

Wear— jewels to wear V A 163 

Who wears a garment " 41o 

their crimson liveries wear " 506 

henceforth no creature wear " 1081 

And wear their brave state Son 15 8 

That wear this world out " 55 12 

how thy beauties wear " 77 1 

thoughmarble wear with raining RL 560 

the nightly linen that she wears " 680 

the web it seem'd to wear L C 95 

to water will not wear " 291 

Wearied — She like a wearied lamb R L 737 

So woe hath wearied woe " 1363 

Weariness — . . . . with heavy spright " 121 

of weariness he did complain him " 845 

Weary — or morn or weary even V A 495 

comforter, with weary gait " 529 

Hot, faint, and weary " 559 

brier his weary legs doth scratch " 705 

lark, weary of rest " 853 

asks the weary caitiff " 914 

Thus weary of the world " 1189 

his wearj' noon-tide prick R L 781 

The weary time she cannot " 1361 

so weary, and so mild " 1542 

to rest thy weary head " 1621 

from highmost pitch, with weary 

car Son 7 9 

Weary with toil I haste me " 27 1 

my weary travel's end " 50 2 

to the weary night " 61 2 

Weary — And time doth weary time R L 1570 

Weasel — Night-wandering weasels 

shriek to see him " 307 

Weather— the weather being cold VA 402 

consulting for foul weather " 972 

of stormy blustering weather R L 115 

age like winter weather P P 12 3 

Web — She unweaves the web V A 991 

the web it seem'd to wear L C 95 

Wed — One woman would another 

wed PP 19 48 

Wedlock — breach of holy .... vow R L 809 

Weed — bid thee crop a weed VA 946 

herb, leaf, or weed " 1055 

love's modest snow-white weed R L 196 

As corn o'ergrown by weeds " 281 

Unwholesome weeds take root " 870 

Will be a tatter'd weed Son 2 4 

add the rank smell of weeds " 69 12 

invention in a noted weed " 76 6 



Weed — The basest weed out-braves Son 94 
smell far worse than weeds " 94 

weeds among weeds " 124 

W^eek — a minute's mirth to wail a 



week R L 

with his brief hours and weeks Son 116 

Weep — that laughs and weeps V A 

then would Adonis weep " 

while the widow weeps R L 

weeps at thy languishment " 

But as the earth doth weep " 

Which makes the maid weep " 

One justly weeps " 

to weep are often willing " 

If thou dost weep for grief " . 

to sigh, to weep, and groan " . 

Lo, here weeps Hecuba " . 

she weeps Troy's painted woes " . 

to weep upon the tainted place " . 
Who should weep most " . 

weep with equal strife " . 

He weeps for her " . 

be thy widow, and still weep Son 
And weep afresh " 

But weep to have that " 

the laugher weep L C 
Though Reason weep, and cry " , 

to weep at woes " 

I weep for thee and yet P P 
Procure to weep " 

If thou sorrow, he will weep 



12 
14 
4 

213 
11 
. 414 
. 1090 
. 906 
. 1130 
. 1226 
1232 
. 1235 
. 1237 
. 1272 
. 1302 
,. 14S5 
,. 1492 
. 1745 
. 1791 
. 1792 
. 1798 



7 

14 

124 

168 

307 

7 

32 
53 



Weeper — To make the weeper laugh L C 124 



VA 



RL 



LC . 



P P 18 



2 
949 

685 
754 
1087 
1375 
1680 
39 
304 
41 



W^eepins; — of the weeping morn 

thou provokest such weeping 

could weeping purify 

with weeping will unfold 

where she sits weeping 

seem'd a weeping tear 

one pair of weeping eyes 

Upon whose weeping margent 

or of weeping water 

Herds stand weeping 
Weepingly — acceptance weepingly 

beseech'd L C 

Weigh— Weighs not the dust Son 108 

To weigh how once I sufTer'd " 120 

Whose white weighs down L C 

Weight— with his own weight goes R L 1494 

to bear that weight in me Son 50 6 
Welcome^Welcomes the warm ap- 
proach VA 

welcome to her princely guest R L 

that seem'd to welcome woe " 

Makes summer's welcome Son 56 

Then give me welcome " 110 

For she doth welcome daylight P P 15 7 
Welcomed— Well was he welcomed R L 51 



207 

10 

8 

226 



386 

90 

1509 

14 

13 



Welfare— Until her husband's . . . 
And sick of welfare 

Welkin — Against the welkin 
in his fair welkin once appear 

Well — As well as mine 
mayst thou well be tasted 
Well-painted idol 
For knowing well, if there 
a well-proportion'd steed 
can so well defend her 
I can be well contented 
her thirsty lips well knew 



Son 118 

VA 

RL 

VA 



263 
7 
921 
115 
117 
128 
212 
245 
290 
472 
513 
543 



WELL 



342 



WERE 



Well— and look well to her heart VA . 

They that thrive well " 

on thy well-breath'd horse " 

grief may be compared well " 

pleased her babe so well " 

resembling well his pale cheeks " 

cancell'd ere well begun -R L 

Well was he welcomed " 

and thou art well appaid " 

As well to hear as grant " 

' Well, well, dear CoUatine " 

To imitate thee well " 

than I can well express " 

peasants did so well resemble " 

private widow well may keep Son 

if it shall go well " 

that like of hearsay well " 

my well-contented day " 

well of such a salve can speak " 

in whom all ill well shows " 

thy years full well befits " 

be it ill or well " 
you for love sj^eak well of me untrue " 

To love that well " 

being extant, well might show " 

will be well esteem'd " 

subject that before was well " 

who calls me well or ill " 

Mine eye well knows " 
All this the world well knows ; yet 

none knows well " 

yet well I know " 

For well thou know'st " 

as well beseem thy heart " 

£lh, my love well knows " 

then love doth well denote " 

Well could he ride L C 

With wit well blazon'd " 
Well learned is that tongue that 

well can thee commend P P 

Fare well I could not " 

as well as well might be " 

As well as fancy " 

say thou lovcst her well " 

Simple were so well compounded P T 44 

We/Z— quenched in a cool well by Son 154 9 

all their fountains in my well L C 255 

Clear wells spring not P P 18 37 

M' ell-contented— my day Son 32 1 

■Well-doing— by the well-doing steed L C 112 

Well-painted— Well-painted idol VA 212 

To this well-painted piece R L 1443 

Well-proportinnM— .... steed VA 290 

Well-reflnod— form of pen Son 85 8 

Well-seeinff — Lest eyes well-seeing " 148 14 

Well-skill'd— The workman R L 1520 

Well-tinied— the well-tuned warble " 1080 

concord of well-tuned sounds Son 8 5 

Wench — Know, gentle wench, it " 127 3 

Went — like a foul usurper about PX 412 





580 




640 




678 




701 




974 




1169 




26 




51 




914 




915 




1058 




1137 




1286 




1392 


9 


7 


14 


7 


21 


13 


32 


1 


34 


7 


40 


13 


41 


3 


58 


14 


72 


10 


73 


14 


83 


6 


96 


6 


103 


10 


112 


3 


114 


11 


129 


13 


130 


9 


131 


3 


132 


10 


139 


9 


148 


7 




106 




217 


5 


8 


14 


6 


16 


2 


19 


4 


19 


11 



' But tell me, girl, when went 
going he went wilful-slow 
on this side the verdict went 

Wept — that his wound wept 
they have wept till now 

Were — her cheeks were gardens 
So they were dew'd 
when her lips were ready 
Were I hard-favour'd 



Son 
L C . 
VA 



1275 

13 

113 

1054 

1062 

65 

66 

89 

133 



Were — then I were not for thee V A 137 

were it with thy hand felt " 143 

So he were like him " 180 

And were I not immortal, life 

were done " 197 

What were thy lips the worse " 207 

if himself were slain " 243 

As they were mad " 323 

Though I were dumb " 406 

Or were I deaf " 435 

that were but sensible " 436 

feeling were bereft me " 439 

but the very smell were left me " 441 

she lies as she were slain " 473 

Were never four such lamps " 489 

Were beauty under twenty locks " 575 

As if another chase were in the 

skies " 696 

moulds from heaven that were 

divine " 730 

heart were quite undone " 783 

were open'd to the light B L 105 

Or were he not my dear friend " 234 

between them twain there were 

no strife " 405 

If ever man were moved " 587 

a spectacle it were " 631 

Were Tarquin Night, as he is " 785 

which of the twain were better " 1154 

alack, what were it " 1156 

When both were kept for heaven " 1166 

were cloud-eclipsed so " 1224 

As 'twere encouraging the Greeks " 1402 

About him were a press " 1408 

with chaps and wrinkles were dis- 
guised " 1452 

that the skies were sorry " 1524 

Were an all-eating shame Son 2 8 
This were to be new made " 2 13 
Then, were not summer's distilla- 
tion left "59 
Beauty's effect with beauty were 

bereft " 5 11 

Ten times thyself were happier "69 

If all were minded so " 11 7 

O, that you were yourself " 13 1 

determination ; then you were " 13 6 

If it were flll'd with your " 17 2 
But were some child of yours alive " 17 13 

Were it not thy sour leisure " 39 10 
substance of my flesh were thought " 44 1 

self-loving were iniquity " 62 12 

signs of fair were born " 68 3 

sepulchres, were shorn away " 68 6 

although their eyes were kind " 69 11 

They were but sweet " 98 11 

Were it not sinful then " 103 9 

For as you were when first " 104 2 

Ere you were born " 104 14 

and wish I were renew'd " 111 8 

The ills that were not " 118 10 

That you were once unkind " 120 1 

Unless my nerves were brass " 120 4 
if you were by my unkindness 

shaken " 120 5 

Were to import forgetfulness " 122 14 

were but the child of state " .124 1 

Were 't aught to me " 125 1 

Or if it were, it bore " 127 2 



WERE 



343 



WHAT 



Were — teach thee wit, better it were Son 140 5 

If best were as it was L C 98 

His qualities were beauteous " 99 

but were all graced by him " 119 

'Many there were " 134 

were gilded in his smiling " 172 

vows were ever brokers " 173 

till then were levell'd on my face " 282 

her tears, and all were jestings PP 7 12 

were tuned like the lark " 15 6 

Were I with her " 15 13 

Juno but an Ethiop were " 17 16 

Were kisses all the joys " 19 47 

the world and love were young " 20 17 

Thou and I were bolh beguiled " 21 30 

' Pity but he were a king " 21 42 

But in them it were a wbnder P T 32 

Simple were so well compounded " 44 

Wert— Would thou wert as I am VA 869 

O, what banquet wert thou " 445 

fora woman wert thou first created (Store 20 9 

I grant thou wert not married " 82 1 

Thou truly fair wert truly " 82 11 

West — hath ended in the west VA 530 

Stealing unseen to west Son 33 8 

sunset fadeth in the west " 73 6 

glory to the sober west " 132 8 

Wet — making her cheeks all wet VA 83 

make them wet again " 966 

To wet his eyes " 1179 

with swelling drops 'gan wet R L 1228 

how listening Priam wets his eyes " 1548 

to wet a widow's eye Son 9 1 

applying wet to wet • L C 40 

Wetlier— My wether's bell rings P P 18 28 

What— What follows more VA 54 

what she did crave " 88 

What see'st thou " 118 

know not what we mean " 126 

What bare excuses " 188 

What 'tis to love " 202 

'What am I " 205 

Or what great danger " 206 

What were thy lips " 207 

what needs a second striking " 250 

what shall she say " 253 

what he was controlled with " 270 

What recketh he " 283 

AVhat cares he now " 285 

what a horse should have " 299 

O, what a sight it was " 343 

O, what a war of looks " 355 

' What ! canst thou talk " 427 

what banquet wert thou " 445 

What hour is this " 495 

What bargains may I make " 512 

What is ten hundred " 519 

Paying wliat ransom " 550 

What wax so frozen " 565 

What though the rose " 574 

thou know'st not what " 615 

' What should I do " 667 

and with what care " 681 

' Why, what of that " 717 

' What is thy body " 757 

' What have you urged " 787 

what dost thou mean " 933 

What may a heavy groan " 950 

what treasure hast thou lost " 1075 



What — What face remains VA 107G 

what canst thou boast " 1077 

What priceless wealth R L 17 

What needeth then apologies " 31 

That what they have not . " 135 

What following sorrow " 186 

'What win I " 211 

Or what fond beggar " 215 

' O what excuse " 225 

That what is vile " 252 

What could he see " 414 

What did he note " 415 

What he beheld " 416 

What terror 'tis " 453 

Under what colour " 476 

' I see what crosses " 491 

I know what thorns " 492 

on what he looks " 497 

What wrong, what shame, what 

sorrow I shall breed " 499 

marking what he tells " 510 

what thou seem'st " 600 

what thou art " 601 

What darest tliou not " 606 

what he would lose again " 688 

what helpless shame " 756 

To ciisher what is writ " 811 

What virtue breeds " 872 

what he hath said " 915 

what's done by night " 1092 

' alack, what were it " 1156 

What legacy shall I bequeath " 1192 

'on what occasion break " 1270 

What should I say " 1291 

What wit sets down " 1299 

Ulysses, 0, what art " 1394 

Of what she was " 1453 

What uncouth ill event " 1598 

Sweet love, what spite " 1600 

And what wrong else " 1622 

What he breathes out " 1666 

From what is past " 1685 

What is the quality " 1702 

can see what once I was " 1764 

distinguish what he said " 1785 

What acceptable audit Son 4 12 

remembrance what it was " 5 12 

Then what could death do " 6 11 

Look, what an unthrift "99 

what silent love " 23 13 

Now see what good turns " 24 9 

They draw but what they see " 24 14 

With what I most enjoy " 29 8 

Look, what is best " 37 13 

What can mine own praise " 39 3 

And what is't but mine " 39 4 

absence, what a torment " 39 9 

What hast thou then " 40 2 

taste of what thyself refusest " 40 8 

what woman's son " 41 7 

When what I seek " 50 2 

O, what excuse will my poor beast " 51 5 

What is your substance " 53 1 

what should I do " 57 1 

To what you will " 58 11 

what the old world could say " 59 9 

Or what strong hand " 65 11 

to show what wealth " 67 13 

what beauty was of yore " 68 14 



WHAT 



344 



WHEN 



What— What merit lived in me Son 72 2 

Save what is had " 75 12 

what is already spent " 76 12 

still telling what is told " 76 14 

Look, what thy memory " 77 9 

Yet what of thee " 79 7 

what in thee doth live " 79 12 

Since what he owes " 79 14 

What strained touches " 82 10 

what worth in you doth grow " 83 8 

what in you is writ " 84 9 

what nature made " 84 10 

O, what a happy title " 92 11 

But what's so blessed-fair " 92 13 

O, in what sweets " 95 4 

O, what a mansion " 95 9 
What freezings have I felt, what 

dark days seen " 97 3 

What old December's bareness " 97 4 

what shall be thy amends " 101 1 

Alack, what poverty " 103 1 

What's in the brain " 108 1 
What's new to speak, what new 

to register " 108 3 

sold cheap what is most dear "110 3 

have what shall have no end " 110 9 

To what it works in " 111 7 

For what care I " 112 3 

what it doth catch " 113 8 

what with his gust is 'greeing " 114 11 

What potions have I drunk " 119 1 

What wretched errors " 119 5 

what I think good " 121 8 

What thou dost foist " 123 6 

what we see doth lie " 123 11 

what dost thou " 137 1 

see not what they see " 137 2 

They know what beauty is " 137 3 

Yet what the best is " 137 4 

What need'st thou wound " 139 7 

that loves what they despise " 141 3 

what thou dost hide " 142 13 

what eyes hath Love " 148 1 

what they see aright " 148 4 

What means the world " 148 6 

AVhat merit do I " 149 9 

O, from what power " 150 1 

what others do abhor " 150 11 

to know what conscience is " 151 1 

what- contents it bears LC 19 

What unapproved witness " 53 

What's sweet to do " 88 

What largeness thinks in Paradise " 91 

AVhat rounds, what bounds, what 

course, what stop he makes " 109 

for him what he would say " 132 

What with his art in youth " 145 

what will not stay " 159 

what tributes wounded fancies " 197 

What me your minister " 229 

what labour is't to leave " 239 

mastering what not strives " 240 

what are precepts worth " 267 

what a hell of witchcraft lies " 288 

What rocky heart " 291 

What breast so cold " 292 

What I should do again " 322 

what fool is not so wise P P 3 13 

What though her frowning brows " 19 13 



What— What though she strive P P 


19 19 


what parts can so remain P T 


48 


Whate'er — whate'er is in his way VA 


.... 623 


And do whate'er thou wilt Son 


19 6 


Whate'er thy thoughts " 


93 11 


Whatsoever — Till whatsoever star " 


20 9 


Wheel— giddy round of Fortune's 




wlieel R L 


.... 952 


When— But when her lips V A 


.... 89 


when thou thyself art dead " 


.... 172 


when they blot the sky " 


.... 184 


And when from thence " 


.... 227 


Look, when a painter " 


.... 289 


When, lo, the unback'd breeder " 


.... 320 


When it is barr'd " 


330 


When the heart's attorney " 


.... 335 


when he saw his love " 


.... 393 


But, when his glutton eye " 


.... 399 


when in his fresh array " 


.... 483 


when most his choice " 


570 


When he did frown " 


.... 571 


shine when he doth fret " 


621 


When thou didst name " 


641 


And when thou hast on foot " 


679 


When reason is the bawd " 


792 


when their captain once " 


893 


When he hath ceased " 


919 


Who when he lived " 


.... 935 


when she seemeth drown'd " 


.... 984 


When as I met the boar " 


.... 999 


As when the wind " 


.... 1046 


But when Adonis lived " 


.... 1085 


When he hath sung " 


.... 1095 


When he beheld his shadow " 


.... 1099 


When he was by " 


.... 1101 


when it seems most just " 


.... 1156 


When Collatiue unwisely R L 


.... 10 


When at CoUatium " 


.... 50 


When virtue bragg'd " 


.... 54 


When beauty boasted blushes " 


.... 55 


When shame assail'd " 


.... 63 


And when great treasure " 


.... 1.32 


When shall he think " 


.... 159 


When he himself " 


.... 160 


When heavy sleep " 


.... 163 


When thou shalt charge me " 


.... 226 


when beauty pleadeth " 


.... 268 


And when his gaudy banner " 


.... 272 


But when a black-faced cloud " 


.... 547 


When thus thy vices " 


.... 604 


when once thou art " 


.... 606 


When they in thee " 


.... 613 


AVhen, pattern'd by thy fault " 


.... 629 


When most unseen " 


.... 676 


and when that decays " 


.... 713 


When virtue is profaned " 


.... 847 


when he cannot use it " 


.... 862 


when temperance is thaw'd " 


.... 884 


' When wilt thou be " 


.... 897 


When wilt thou sort an hour " 


.... 899 


' When Truth and Virtue " 


.... 911 


When Tarquin did " 


.... 917 


when they list " 


.... 1008 


But when I fear'd " . 


.... 1048 


when lo, the blushing morrow " . 


.... 1082 


When with like semblance " . 


... 1113 


when time is kept with tears " . 


.... 1127 


When life is shamed " . 


... 1155 


when death takes one " . 


... 1161 



WHEN 



345 



WHEN 



When — ^When the one pure, the 

other RL 1164 

When both were kept for heaven " 1166 

■when sadly she had laid " 1-12 

when sun doth melt their snow '" 1218 

But tell me, girl, when went " 1275 

When more is felt " ...- 1288 

when he is by to hear her " 1318 

When sighs and groans " 1319 

When every part a part of woe " 1327 

When, silly groom ! Got wot " 1345 

When their brave hope " 1430 

When their glass fell " 1526 

Which when her sad-beholding " 1590 

And when the judge is robb'd " 1652 

when I might charm thee so " 1681 

When they had sworn " 1849 

When forty winters Son 2 1 

when thou art old " 2 13 

when thou feel'st it cold " 2 14 

when nature calls thee " 4 11 

when the gracious light "71 

But when from highmost pitch " 7 9 

When every private widow "97 

when thou from youth " 11 4 

When I do count the clock " 12 1 

When I behold the violet " 12 3 

When lofty trees I see " 12 5 

when he takes thee hence " 12 14 

When your sweet issue " 13 8 

When I consider every thing " 15 1 

When I perceive that men " 15 5 

When in eternal lines " 18 12 

But when in thee " 22 3 

when mine is slain " 22 13 

when body's work's expired " 27 4 

When day's oppression " 28 3 

when clouds do blot " 28 10 

When sparkling stars " 28 12 

When, in disgrace " 29 .1 

When to the sessions " 30 1 

When that churl Death " 32 2 

when heaven's sun staineth " 33 14 

When thou thyself " 38 8 

When thou art all " 89 2 

when I praise thee " 39 4 

When I am sometime absent " 41 2 

And when a woman woos " 41 7 

When most I wink " 43 1 

But when I sleep " 43 3 

When to unseeing eyes " 43 8 

When in dead night " 43 11 

when dreams do show " 43 14 

when thou art gone " 44 10 

For when these quicker " 45 5 

When that mine eye " 47 3 

when I took my way " 48 1 

When I shall see " 49 2 

When as thy love hath cast " 49 3 

when thou shalt strangely pass " 49 5 

When love, converted " 49 7 

When what I seek " 50 2 

when from thee I speed " 51 2 

When swift extremity " 51 6 

When summer's breath " 54 8 

When that shall vade " 54 14 

When wasteful war shall statues " 55 5 

that, when they see " 56 11 

When you have bid " 57 8 



When — But when my glass Son 62 9 

When hours have draiu'd " 63 3 

when his youthful morn " 63 4 

When I have seen " 64 1 

When sometime lofty towers " 64 3 

When I have seen the hungry " 64 5 

When I have seen such interchange " 64 9 

When rocks impregnable " 65 7 

When beauty lived " 68 2 

for me when I am dead " 71 1 

When I perhaps compounded am " 71 10 

When yellow leaves " 73 2 

when that fell arrest " 74 1 

When thou re vie west " 74 5 

when I of you do write " 80 1 

when I in earth am rotten " 81 2 

When you entombed in men's eyes " 81 8 

When all the breathers " 81 12 

when they have devised " 82 9 

When others would give life " 83 12 

But when your countenance " 86 13 

When thou shalt be disposed " 88 1 

hate me when thou wilt " 90 1 

when my heart hath 'scaped " 90 5 

When other petty griefs " 90 10 

When in the least " 92 6 

When proud-pied April " 98 2 

When I was wont to greet " 102 6 

when her mournful hymns " 102 10 

when it hath my added praise " 103 4 

when you look in it " 103 14 

when first your eye " 104 2 

When in the chronicle " 106 1 

When tyrants' crests " 107 14 

when first I hallow'd " 108 8 

When I was certain " 115 11 

when it alteration finds " 116 3 

sickness when we purge "118 4 

when I saw myself to win " 119 4 

when it is built " 119 11 

When not to be receives " 121 2 

When most impeach'd stands least " 125 14 

when thou, my music " 128 1 

when thou gently sway'st " 128 3 

My mistress, when she walks " 130 12 

When my love swears " 138 1 

when thy might " 139 7 

' when their deaths be near " 140 7 

that, when it grows " 142 11 

But when she saw " 145 4 

When I against myself " 149 2 

think on thee, when I forgot " 149 3 

When all my best " 149 11 

When I break twenty " 152 6 

When he again desires her L C 66 

And when in his fair parts " 83 

When winds breathe sweet " 103 

For when we rage " 160 

when they to assail begun " 262 

When thou impressest " 267 

When thou wilt inflame " 268 

When he most burn'd " 314 

When my love swears PP 1 1 
When Cytherea, all in love "63 
When as himself to singing he be- 
takes " 8 12 
when the fair queen of love -"91 
When first it 'gins to bud " 13 3 
When as thine eye hath chose " 19 1 



WHEN 



346 



WHEREIN 



When — Aud when thou comest PP 19 7 

When craft hath taught her " 19 22 

When time shall serve " 19 35 

When time with age " 19 46 

Whence — From whence at pleasure Son 48 12 

whence didst thou steal " 99 2 

Whence hast thou this • " 150 5 

Where — where never serpent hisses F^4 17 

And where she ends she doth " 60 

conquers where he comes " 100 

where there are but twain " 123 

where I list to sport me " 154 

For, where they lay " 176 

Feed where thou wilt " 232 

where the pleasant fountains lie " 234 

For where a heart is hard " 426 

' O, where am I " 493 

For where Love reigns " 649 

where earth-delving conies keep " 687 

' Where did I leave ?' ' No matter 

where " 715 

Where fearfully the dogs " 886 

where they view'd each other's " 963 

Where they resign their office " 1039 

where no breach should be " 1066 

Where, lo, two lamps " 1128 

where herself herself beheld " 1129 

where is no cause of fear " 1153 

where it should most mistrust " 1154 

where it shows most toward " 1157 

to Paphos, where their queen " 1193 

Where mortal stars, as bright R L 13 

Where, lest between them both " 74 

Then where is truth " 158 

Where her beloved Collatinus lies " 256 

where such treasure lies " 280 

from the rushes where it lies " 318 

Where, like a virtuous monument " 391 

Where their dear governess " 443 

Where thou with patience " 486 

in a wilderness where are no laws " 544 

Where subjects' eyes do learn " 616 

school where Lust shall learn " 617 

where it may find " 760 

'Where now I have " 792 

where the sweet, birds sing " 871 

where he the lamb may get " 878 

where none may spy him " 881 

where his suit may be obtained " 898 

Debate where leisure serves " 1019 

where it lay " 1057 

where she sits weeping " 1087 

where hangs a piece " 1366 

of Dardan, where they fought " 1436 

a face where all distress is stell'd " 1444 

where cares have carved some " 1445 

But none where all distress " 1446 

Where no excuse can give " 1614 

Where thou wast wont " 1621 

where you did fulfil " 1635 

prison where it breathed " 1726 

Where shall I live " 1754 

where abundance lies Son 1 7 

where all thy beauty lies "25 

Where all the treasure "26 

For where is she "35 

where every eye doth dwell "52 

bareness every where "58 

where wasteful Time " 15 11 



Where — where your true image Son 24 6 

Where I may not remove " 25 14 

where thou mayst prove me " 26 14 

from far where I abide " 27 5 

where buried love doth live " 31 9 

follows where thou art " 41 4 

Where thou art forced " 41 12 

where thou dost stay " 44 4 

where he would be " 44 8 

Save where thou art not " 48 10 

From where thou art " 51 3 

where two contracted new " 56 10 

Where you may be " 57 10 

Save, where you are " 57 12 

Be where you list " 58 9 

meditation ! where, alack " 65 9 

buried where my body is " 72 11 

where late the sweet birds sang " 73 4 

and where they did proceed " 76 8 

Where breath most breathes " 81 14 

Where cheeks need blood " 82 14 

where your equal grew " 84 4 

admired every where " 84 12 

where is my deserving " 87 6 

Where beauty's veil " 95 11 

December's bareness every where " 97 4 

where they grew " 98 8 

Where art thou, Muse " 100 1 

Time's spoils despised every where " 100 12 

tongue doth publish every where " 102 4 

Where time and outward form " 108 14 

see where it lies " 137 3 

where all men ride " 337 6 

where is my judgement " 148 3 

Where Cupid got new fire " 153 14 
Where want cries some, but where 

excess begs all L C 42 

following where he haunted " 130 

Heard where his plants " 171 

Where neither party is " 186 

where I myself must render " 221 

Where all those pleasures live P P 5 6 

A brook where Adon used "66 

Where her faith was firmly flx'd " 18 11 

Where thy desert may merit " 19 27 

Whereas — bounced in, .... he stood " 6 13 

Whereat — whereat a sudden pale V A .589 

Whereat the impartial gazer " 748 

Whereat amazed, as one " 823 

whereat it groans " 829 

Whereat she starts " 878 

Whereat her tears began " 979 

Whereat she leaps " 1026 

Whereat each tributary " 1045 

Whereat a waxen torch R L 178 

Whereat she smiled " 264 

Wlierefore— But do not you Son 16 1 

Ah, wherefore with infection " 67 1 

But wherefore says she not " 138 9 

And wherefore say not I " 138 10 

But wherefore says my love P P 1 9 

And wherefore say not I " 1 10 

Wherein— Wherein she framed thee F^ 731 

wherein they late excell'd " 1131 

Wherein I will not kiss " 118S 

wherein her needle sticks R L 317 

wherein it shall discern " 619 

wherein by nature they delight " 697 

Wherein is stamp'd " 1246 



WHEREIN 



347 



WHICH 



Wlierein — wherein they view'd their 

faces RL 1526 

Wherein deep policy " 1815 

the frame wherein 'tis lield Son 2-1 3 

the womb wherein they grew " 86 4 

wherein I am attainted " 88 7 

Wherein it finds a joy " 91 6 

Wherein I should " 117 2 

Whereof— The fear whereof VA 880 

The spots whereof could weeping 

purify RL 685 

whereof in Lucrece' view " 1261 

whereof are you made Son 53 1 

whereof now he's king " 63 6 

Whereon — violets whereon we lean V A 125 

primrose bank whereon I lie " 151 

Whereon they surfeit " 544 

whereon thou dost lie " 646 

AVhereon with fearful eyes " 927 

Whereon the stars Son 15 4 

whereon it must expire " 73 11 

whereon my false eyes dote " 148 5 

Whereon the thought LC 10 

Wheresoe'er — wheresoe'er they Qy R L 1014 

lVhere-throug:h — the sun Son 24 11 

Whereto— Wheretoallbondsdotieme" 117 4 

Whereto the inviting time " 124 8 

Whereto the judgement " 137 8 

Whereto his invised properties L C 212 

Whereupon — whereupon it gazeth Son 20 6 

Whereupon it made this threne P T 49 

Wherever — where'er he goes V A 622 

wherever I abide Son 45 2 

Wlierewlth — . . . . being crown'd " 60 6 

hast wherewith to spend P P 21 36 

Whet— did not whet his teeth VA 1113 

Whether — And whe'r he run or fly 

they know not whether " 304 

Whether it is that she R L 376 

For whether beauty, birth Son 37 5 
Whether we are mended, or whe- 
ther better they " 59 11 
Or whether revolution be " 59 12 
Or whether doth my mind " 114 1 
Or whether shall I say "114 3 
And whether that my angel " 144 9 

Whether the horse by him L C Ill 

And whether that my angel P P 2 9 
But whether vinripe years "49 

or a lecher whether " 7 17 

nill I construe whether " 14 8 

Whetteth— he whetteth still VA 617 

Which — Which bred more beauty " 70 

Which long have rain'd " 83 

that which thou unask'd shalt have " 102 

which way shall she turn " 253 

His eye, which scornfully glisters " 275 

tears, which chorus-like her eyes " 360 

Which to his speech " 452 

Which cunning love " 471 

hers, which through the crystal 

tears " 491 

AVhich purchase if thou make " 515 

The which, by Cupid's bow " 581 

effects which she in him finds 

missing " 605 

To which Love's eyes " 632 

fox which lives by subtlety " 675 

roe which no encounter dare " 676 



Which— through the which he goes VA 683 

Which by the rights of time " 759 

Which the hot tyrant " 797 

arms which bound him to her breast " 812 

Which after him she darts " 817 

Through which it enters " 890 

Which madly huri-ies her " 904 

Which her cheek melts " 982 

Which knows no pity " 1000 

Which seen, her eyes " 1031 

Which with cold terror " 1048 

Which in round drops " 1170 

sap, which she compares " 1176 

Which in pale embers hid R L 5 

Which triumph'd in that sky " 12 

that which is so singular " 32 

hap which their superiors want " 42 

coal which in his liver glows " 47 

, Which of them both " 53 

Which virtue gave " 60 

Which Tarquin view'd " 72 

Which far exceeds " 81 

praise which Collatine doth owe " 82 

Which, having all " 96 

As one of which " 127 

that which they possess " 135 

for that which we expect " 149 

Which must be lode-star " 179 

that which is divine " 193 

Which in a moment " 250 

Which struck her sad, and then " 262 

Both which, as servitors " 285 

That eye which looks " 290 

That eye which him beholds " 291 

Which once corrupted " 294 

Which drives the creeping thief " 305 

heart, which fond desire " 314 

bars which stop the hourly dial " 327 

Which with a yielding latch " 339 

Which gives the watch-word " 370 

His eye, which late this mutiny 

■ restrains " 426 

The sight which makes " 455 

Which he by dumb demeanour " 474 

Which I to conquer sought " 483 

Which like a falcon " 506 

Which blows these pitchy vapours " 550 

Which to her oratory " 564 

' All which together, like a " 5S9 

Which in her prescience " 727 

disgrace which they themselves 

behold " 751 

Which underneath thy black " 801 

faults which in thy reign " 804 

Which not themselves " 833 

honey which thy chaste bee kept " 840 

that soul which wretchedness hath 

chained " 900 

Which thronging through her lips " 1041 

Or tliat which from discharged 

cannon fumes " 1043 

that is gone for which I sought " 1051 

determining which way to fly " 1150 

which of the twain " 1154 

' My body or my soul, which was 

the dearer " 1163 

Through which I may convey " 1176 

AVhich by him tainted " 1182 

AVhich makes the maid weep " 1232 



WHICH 



348 



WHICH 



Uliicli — but that which doth devour R L 1256 

Throng her inventions, which 

shall go before " 1302 

suspicion which the world might 

bear ' " 1321 

Before the which is drawn " 1368 

Which the conceited painter " 1371 

Which heartless peasants " 1392 

breath, which purl'd up '• 1407 

Which seem'd to swallow up " 1409 

Which bleeding under Pyrrhus' " 1449 

Which all this time " 1576 

Which when her sad-beholding 

husband saw " 1590 

Which speechless woe of his " 1674 

map which deep impression bears " 1712 

Which seems to weep " 1746 

that which is so putrified " 1750 

That life was mine which thou . 

hast here deprived " 1752 

Which she too early " 1801 

vow, which Brutus made before " 1847 

Which being done with speedy " 1853 

Which, used, lives Son 4 14 
And that unfair which fairly doth 

excel "54 

AVhich happies those "60 

that which thou receivest "83 

Which to repair should be thy " 10 8 

from that which thou departest " 11 2 

blood which youngly thou bestow'st " 11 3 

Which bounteous gift " 11 12 

Which erst from heat " 12 6 

beauty which you hold in lease " 13 5 

Which husbandry in honour " 13 10 

Which this Time's pencil " 16 10 

Which hides your life " 17 4 

Which steals men's eyes " 20 8 

Which in thy breast " 22 7 

thy heart, which I will keep " 22 11 

Which in my Vjosom's shop " 24 7 

forgot for which he toil'd " 25 12 

Duty so great which wit so poor " 26 5 

darkness which the blind do see " 27 8 

Which, like a jewel hung in " 27 11 

Which I new-pay " 30 12 

Which I by lacking " 31 2 

friends which I thought buried " 31 4 
As interest of the dead, which 



now appear " 
those tears are pearl which thy 

love sheds " 

at that which thou hast done " 

"thief which sourly robs from me " 

Which though it alter not " 

those old nine which rhymers in- 

vocate " 
That due to thee which thou de- 

servest " 

Which time and thoughts " 

Which heavily he answers " 

The which he will not " 

wardrobe which the robe doth hide " 

ornament which truth doth give " 

odour which doth in it live " 

Which but to-day " 

Which parts the shore " 

winter, which, being full of care " 

new, but that which is " 



31 7 

34 13 

35 1 

35 14 

36 7 

38 10 



39 


8 


39 


12 


50 


11 


52 


3 


52 


10 


54 


2 


54 


4 


56 


3 


56 


10 


56 


13 


59 


1 



Which — Which, labouring for in- 
vention Son 

that which goes before " 

death, which cannot choose " 

that which it fears to lose " 

that which I bring forth " 

those boughs which shake " 

Which by and by black night " 

that which it was nourish'd by " 
This thou perceivest which makes 

thy love " 
To love that well which thou must 

leave " 

Which for memorial " 

earth, which is his due " 

is that which it contains " 

The wrinkles which thy glass " 

of that which I compile " 

for that which he doth say " 

Which eyes not yet created " 

words which writers use " 

Which shall be most my glory " 

most? which can say more " 

Which should example where your " 
praise, which makes your praises 

worse " 

Which nightly gulls him " 

strains of woe, which now seem woe " 

that which on thy humour " 

Which, like a canker " 

Which for their habitation " 

Which on thy soft cheek " 

that which gives thee all thy might " 
Since first I saw you fresh, which 

yet are green " 
hue, which methinks still doth stand " 
For fear of which " 
Three themes in one, which won- 
drous scope affords " 
Which three till now " 
For we, which now behold " 
Which hath not figured " 
soul, which in thy breast doth lie " 
means which public manners breeds " 
Which vulgar scandal " 
And that which governs me " 
or shape, which it doth latch " 
to that which still doth grow " 
Which alters when it alteration " 
Which should transport me " 
Which, rank of goodness " 
that sorrow which I then did feel " 
salve which wounded bosoms fits " 
pleasure lost, which is so deem'd " 
Which in their wills " 
Which shall above that " 
Which works on leases " 
Which die for goodness " 
Which prove more short " 
Which is not niix'd " 
lips, which should that harvest " 
Which my heart knows " 
that which flies before " 
that which flies from thee " 
Which like two spirits " 
For that which longer nurseth " 
that which doth preserve " 
Desire is death, which physic did 
except " 



59 


3 


60 


3 


64 


13 


G4 


14 


72 


13 


73 


8 


73 


7 


73 


12 



73 13 



73 


14 


74 


4 


74 


7 


74 


13 


77 


5 


78 


9 


79 


13 


81 


10 


82 


3 


83 


10 


84 


1 


84 


4 


84 


14 


86 


10 


90 


13 


92 


8 


95 


2 


95 


10 


99 


4 


100 


2 


104 


8 


104 


11 


104 


13 


105 


12 


105 


14 


106 


13 


108 


2 


109 


4 


HI 


4 


112 


2 


113 


2 


113 


6 


115 


14 


116 


3 


117 


8 


118 


12 


120 


2 


120 


12 


121 


3 


121 


8 


122 


3 


124 


10 


124 


14 


125 


4 


125 


11 


128 


7 


137 


10 


143 


7 


143 


9 


144 


2 


147 


2 


147 


3 



WHICH 



349 



WHO 



Which — Which have no correspond- 
ence Son 148 

Which borrow'd. from this holy fire " 153 

a seething bath which yet men 

prove " 153 

Which many legions " 154 

Which from Love's fire " 154 

Which fortiiied her visage L C 

Which on it had " 

Which one by one " 

Which she perused " 

Which may her suffering " 

objects wliich abroad they And " 

landlord which doth owe them " 

proofs new -bleeding, which re- 
raain'd the foil " 

Which late her noble suit " 

the place which did no form receive " 

accident which brought me to her 



PP 



VA 



PL 



eye 
water which their hue encloses 
heart which in his level came 
AVhich, like a cherubin 
fire which in his cheek so glow'd 
AVhich is to me some praise 
Which, not to anger bent 
Which bj' a gift of learning 
That which with scorn 
AVhich a grove of myrtles made 

While — While she takes all 
while now it sleeps alone 
While lust and murder wakes 
winks while Orpheus plays 
While in his hold-fast foot 
While Lust is in his pride 
dies while the physician sleeps 
pines while the oppressor feeds 
feasting while the widow weeps 
sporting while infection breeds 
While thou on Tereus descant'st 
while others saucily 
While Collatine and his consorted 

lords 
While with a joyless smile 
While thou dost breathe 
While shadows like to thee 
While comments of your praise 
Now, while the world is bent 
While he insults 
While Philomela sits and sings 

While— m a breathing-while 
A pretty while these pretty crea- 
tures stand P L 
a little while doth stay " 
came in her mind the while " 
But if the while I think Son 

Whiles — And whiles against a thorn P L 

Whilst — Whilst I, whom fortune Son 
Whilst that this shadow 
Whilst I, my sovereign, watch ■ 
whilst thou dost wake elsewhere 
Whilst I alone did call 
Whilst he upon your 
whilst other write good words 
Whilst, like a willing patient 
Whilst it hath thought 
Whilst my poor lips 
Whilst her neglected child 
Whilst I thy babe 



Son 


38 


" 


61 


" 


85 


" 


90 


" 


107 


PP 


15 


VA 





7 

6 

10 

9 

16 

38 

44 

69 

137 

140 

153 

234 
241 

247 

287 

309 

319 

324 

10 

12 

14 

18 

4 

564 

786 

168 

553 

555 

705 

904 

905 

906 

907 

1134 

1348 

1609 
1711 
2 
4 
2 
2 
12 
5 
1142 

1233 

1364 

1530 

13 

1135 

3 

10 

6 

13 

1 

10 

5 

9 

6 

7 

5 

10 



Whilst— Whilst many nymphs Son 154 3 
Whilst as fickle Fortune P P 21 29 
Whilst thou hast wherewith " 21 36 
Whirlwind— My sighs, like whirl- 
winds P L 586 

Whisper — whispers in mine ear V A 659 

She whispers in his ear " 1125 

Whispering: — . . . . conspirator P L 769 

Whit— my love no whit disdaineth Son 33 13 

White — More white and red V A 10 

best; and being white " 77 

How white and red " 346 

So white a friend engirts so white 

a foe " 364 

a whiter hue than white " 398 

was it not white " 643 

whose wonted lily white " 1053 

chequer'd with white " 11G8 

clear unmatched red and white P L 11 

stain that o'er with silver-white " 56 

in that white intituled " 57 

the red should fence the white " 63 

beauty's red and virtue's white " 65 

love's modest snow-white weed " 196 

Then white as lawn " 259 

coverlet; whose perfect white " 394 

her snow-white dimpled chin " 420 

Who o'er the white sheet " 472 

Like a white hind " 542 

Till with her own white fleece " 678 

like the snow-white swan " 1011 

his beard all silver-white " 1405 

all silver'd o'er with white Son 12 4 

with white and bristly beard " 12 8 

wonder at the lily's white " 98 9 

shame, another white despair " 99 9 

A third, nor red, nor white " 99 10 

If snow be white " 130 3 

roses damask'd red and white "130 5 

In bloodless white L 201 

Whose white weighs down " 226 

There my white stole of chastity " 297 

Or to turn white and swound " 308 

than her milk-white dove PP 9 3 

Let the priest in surplice white P T 13 

Whiteness — upon their .... stood VA 1170 

Whiter — a whiter hue than white " 398 

peers her whiter chin P L 472 

Whither — she knows not whither VA 904 

Who— Who blush'd and pouted " 33 

Who, being looked on " 87 

Who conquers where he comes " 100 

As who should say " 280 

hairs, who wave like feather'd 

wings " 306 

Who sees his true-love " 397 

Who is so faint " 401 

Who wears a garment " 415 

Who plucks the hud " 416 

For who hath she " 847 

Who doth the world " 857 

Who shall cope him first " 888 

Who, overcome by doubt " 891 

Who when he lived " 935 

eyelids, who, like sluices, stopp'd " 956 

Asstriving who should best become " 968 

Who is but drunken " 984 

To wail his death who lives and " 1017 

Who bids them still " 1041 



WHO 



350 



WHOSE 



Who— Who, like a king VA 1043 

They both would strive who first 

should dry his tears " 1092 

Who did not whet his teeth " 1113 

Who buys a minute's mirth R L 213 

. who will the vine destroy " 215 

Who fears a sentence " ?44 

Then who fears sinking " 280 

Who, flatter'd by their leader's " 296 

As who should say " 320 

Who with a lingering stay " 328 

Who sees the lurking serpent " 362 

Who, therefore angry " 388 

Who, like a foul usurper " 412 

Who, peeping forth " 447 

Who, angry that the eyes " 461 

Who o'er the white sheet " 472 

Who seek to stain " 655 

Who this accomplishment " 716 

Who in their pride " 864 

For who so base " 1000 

He shall not boast who did thy 

stock pollute " 1063 

Who wayward once, his mood " 1095 

Who, being stopp'd " 1119 

Who, if it wink " 1139 

Who, having two sweet babes " 1161 

Who in a salt-waved ocean " 1231 

And who cannot abuse " 1267 

Who nothing wants " 1459 

And who she finds forlorn " 1500 

Who finds his Lucrece " 1585 

Who, like a late-sack'd island " 1740 

Who, mad that sorrow " 1781 

Who should weep most " 1792 

air, who, holding Lucrece' life " 1805 

Brutus, who pluck'd the knife " 1807 

Who, wondering at him " 1845 

Or who is he so fond Son 3 7 

chide thee, who confounds "87 

Who, all in one " 8 12 

Who for thyself " 10 2 

Who lets so fair a house " 13 9 

Who will believe my verse " 17 1 

Who heaven itself " 21 3 

Who with his fear is put besides " 23 2 

Who plead for love " 23 11 

Let those who are in favour " 25 1 

Who all their parts of me " 31 11 

For who's so dumb " 38 7 

him here who doth hence remain " 39 14 

Who lead thee in their riot " 41 11 

Who even but now come back " 45 11 

Or who his spoil of beauty " 65 12 

Who is it that says most " 84 1 

Who, moving others, are " 94 3 

what care I who calls me " 112 3 

who have lived for crime " 124 14 

lovely boy, who in thy power " 126 1 

Who hast by waning grown " 126 3 

At such who, not born fair " 127 11 

Who, in despite of view " 141 4 

Who leaves unsway'd " 141 11 

Dight, who like a fiend " 145 11 

Who art as black as hell " 147 14 

Who hateth thee " 149 5 

Who taught thee how to make " 150 9 

Yet who knows not conscience " 151 2 

who ever shunn'd by precedent i C 155 



Who — Who disciplined, ay, dieted L C 261 

Who glazed with crystal gate " 286 

Who, young and simple " 320 

Whoever— Whoever plots the sin R L 879 

Whoe'er keeps me, let my heart Son 133 11 

Whoever hath her wish " 135 1 

Whole— My heart all whole as thine VA 370 

whose whole is swallow'd R L 1159 

Stood for the whole " 1428 

He pays the whole, and yet am I Son 134 14 

Whom— And whom he strikes VA 624 

part ; through whom he rushes " 630 

From whom each lamp " 861 

To whom she speaks " 918 

The powers to whom I pray S, L 349 

To whom she sobbing speaks " 1088 

by whom thy fair wife bleeds " 1824 

Let those whom Nature Son 11 9 

Look, whom she best endow'd " 11 11 

Whilst I, whom fortune " 25 3 

my love, to whom in vassalage " 26 1 

in whom all ill well shows " 40 13 

to whom my jewels trifles are " 48 5 

Or me, to whom thou gavest it " 87 10 

him whom thou dost hate " 89 14 

to whom I am confined " 110 12 

O'er whom thy fingers walk " 128 11 

Whom thine eyes woo " 142 10 

On whom frown'st thou " 149 6 

did win whom he would maim L C 312 

'Gainst whom the world P P Z 2 
Thou for whom Jove would swear " 17 15 

Whose — Whose sinewy neck VA 99 

breath, whose gentle wind " 189 

Whose hollow womb resounds " 268 

Whose beams upon his hairless " 487 

Whose precious taste " 543 

Whose vulture thought " 551 

love, whose leave exceeds " 568 

Whose tushes never sheathed - " 617 

Whose full perfection " 634 

Under whose sharp fangs " 663 

Whose blood upon the fresh " 665 

sickness, whose attaint " 741 

theirs whose desperate hands " 765 

Under whose simple semblance " 795 

Whose ridges with the meeting " 820 

from whose silver breast " 855 

whose swelling dugs do ache " 875 

Whose frothy mouth " 901 

whose tender horns being hit " 1033 

flank ; whose wonted lily white " 1058 

Whose tongue is music now " 1077 

Under whose brim " 1088 

Whose downward eye " 1106 

doves, by whose swift aid " 1190 

Within whose face M L 52 

Whose inward ill " 91 

her whose light excelleth thine " 191 

Whose crime will bear " 224 

Between whose hills " 390 

coverlet ; whose perfect white " 394 

AVhose ranks of blue veins " 440 

Whose grim aspect sets every " 452 

Whose crooked beak threats " 508 

To whose weak ruins muster troops" 720 

Then they whose whole is " 1159 

Whose love of either " 1165 

By whose example " 1194 



WHOSE 



351 



WILD 



Whose — Whose swift obedience to 

tier mistress hies Ji L 1215 

But they whose guilt " 1342 

Whose waves to imitate " ...» 1438 

Sinon, whose enchanting story " 1521 

Whose words, like wildfire " -... 1523 

Whose deed hath made herself " 1566 

Whose fresh repair Son 3 3 

she so fair whose unear'd womb "35 

Whose speechless song " 8 13 

Whose strength's abundance " 23 4 

Then thou, wliose shadow " 43 5 

the rich, whose blessed key " 52 1 
you, whose worthiness gives scope " 52 13 

Whose action is no stronger " 65 4 

Whose influence is thine " ■ 78 10 

In whose confine immured " 84 3 

my thought, whose love to you " 85 11 
That love is merchandized whose 

rich esteeming " 102 3 

Time, whose million'd accidents " 115 5 

Whose worth's unknown " 116 8 

wood whose motion sounds " 128 2 

As those whose beauties " 131 2 

Wilt thou, whose will " 135 5 

her whose busy care is bent " 143 6 

for whose dear love I rise " 151 14 

a hill whose concave womb L C 1 

Upon whose weeping margent " 39 

Whose bare out-bragg'd the web " — 95 

Not one whose flame " -... 191 

emerald, in whose fresh regard " 213 

Whose white weighs down " 226 

Whose rarest havings " 235 

Whose sights till then were " 282 

to thee is dear, whose heavenly 

touch PP 8 5 

whose deep conceit is such "87 
Love, whose month was ever May " 17 2 

By shallow rivers by whose falls " 20 7 

To whose sound chaste wings P T 4 

Why — why art thou coy V A 96 

why not lips on lips " ...., 120 

why dost abhor me " 138 

why shouldst thou feed " 169 

Why, there Love lived " 246 

' why dost thou feel it " 373 

'Why, what of that " 717 

Why hast thou cast " 951 

why then I know " 1109 

Or why is Collatine R L 33 

' Why hunt I then for colour " 267 

' Why should the worm intrude " 848 

' Why hath thy servant " 932 

' Why work'st thou mischief " 960 

why quiver'st thou at this " 1030 

Why pry'st thou through " 1089 

For why her face " 1222 

Why her two suns " 1224 

Nor why her fair cheeks " 1225 

Why should the private pleasure " 1478 

why should so many fall " 1483 

Priam, why art thou old " 1550 

Why art thou thus attired " 1601 

And why not I from this " 1708 

' Why, Collatine, is woe the cure " 1821 

why dost thou spend Son 4 1 

niggard, why dost thou abuse "45 

usurer, why dost thou use "47 



Wliy — wby hear'st thou music sadly Son 8 1 
Why lovest thou that which "83 
Why didst thou promise " 34 1 
Since why to love " 49 14 
why should I haste me thence " 51 3 
Why should false painting " 67 5 
Why should poor beauty " 67 7 
Why should he live " 67 9 
But why thy odour matcheth not " 69 13 
Why is my verse so barren " 76 1 
Why with the time do I not " 76 3 
Why write I still all one " 76 5 
my judgement knew no reason why " 115 3 
why, fearing of Time's tyranny " 115 9 
For why should others' false adul- 
terate eyes " 121 5 
why are frailer spies " 121 7 
why then her breasts are dun " 130 3 
Why of eyes' falsehood " 137 7 
Why should my heart think " 137 9 
Why dost thou pine within " 146 3 
Why so large cost " 146 5 
why of two oaths' breach " 152 5 

why 'twas beautiful and hard L C 211 

' why was not I a flood P P 6 14 

For why thou left'st me " 10 8 

For why I craved nothing " 10 10 

For why she sigh'd " 15 12 

Wicked— to scratch her wicked foe R L 1035 

should bear a wicked mind " 1540 

Wickedly — wickedly he stalks " 365 

Wide — small head and nostril wide VA 296 

Upon the wide wound " 1052 

the door lie opens wide R L 359 

To the wide world Son 19 7 

my drooping ej'elids open wide " 27 7 

wide as the ocean is " 80 5 

Of the wide world " 107 2 

this wide universe I call " 109 13 

the wide world's common place " 137 10 

though thy proud heart go wide " 140 14 

Widow — while the widow weeps R L 906 

to wet a widow's eye Son 9 1 

The world will be thy widow "95 

When every private widow "97 

WidOTv'd— Like widow'd wombs " 97 8 

Wield — youthful sons bright weap- 
ons wield R L 1432 

Wife — to work upon his wife " 235 

I was a loyal wife " 1048 

Of that unworthy wife " 1304 

slaughter'd husband by the wife " 1376 

for daughter or for wife " 1792 

quoth Collatine, ' she was my wife " 1802 

'My daughter' and 'my wife " 1804 

'my daughter' and 'my wife " 1806 

by whom thy fair wife bleeds " 1824 

Thy wretched wife mistook " 1826 

the death of this true wife " 1841 

like a makeless wife Son 9 4 

Wight — descriptions of the fairest 

wights " 106 2 

As well as fancy, partial wight P P 19 4 

mid— Like a wild bird VA 560 

Till the wild waves " 819 

the unicorn and lion wild R L 956 

tames the one ; the other wild " 1097 

But that wild music Son 102 11 

a youngster proud and wild P P 9 4 



WILD 



352 



WILL 



Wild— Youth is Tvild, and age is tame PP 12 8 

Wilder— Wilder to him than tigers B L 980 

Wilderness — Pleads, in a wilderness " 544 

Wildfire — Whose words like wildfire " 1523 

Wildly— She wildly breaketh VA 874 

Wildly determining which way Jt L 1150 

Wildiiess — than tigers in their .... " 980 

Wile— The wiles and guiles PP 19 37 

Wilful— wilful and unwilling VA 365 

his wilful eye he tired £ L 417 

By wilful taste of what Son 40 8 

Wilfully— doth wilfully appear " 80 8 

Wilfulness — Book both my wilfulness " 117 9 

Wilful-slow — going he went " 51 13 

Will — I'll smother thee with kisses V A 18 

A summer's day will seem " 23 

Perforce will force it " 72 

And I will wink " 122 

I will enchant thine ear " 145 

light, and will aspire " 150 

will draw me through the sky " 153 

I'll sigh celestial breath " 189 

I'll make a shadow " 191 

I'll quench them with my tears " 192 

I'll give it thee again " 209 

For men will kiss " 216 

he will not in her arms be bound " 226 

ril be a park " 231 

her object will away " 255 

will set the heart on tire " 388 

' nor will not know it " 409 

and I will not owe it " 411 

it will not ope the gate " 424 

Will never rise, so he will kiss her 

still " 480 

If you will say so " 536 

That she will draw " 552 

' this night I'll waste " 583 

He will not manage her " 598 

good queen, it will not be " 607 

on the lion he will venture " 628 

world will hold thee " 761 

you will fall again " 769 

will not let a false sound enter • " 780 

now I will away " 807 

will have him seen no more " 819 

now she will no further " 905 

The Destinies will curse thee " 945 

will ever strive to kiss you " 1082 

Wherein I will not kiss " 1188 

That it will live R L 203 

the scandal will survive " 204 

the herald will contrive " 206 

who will the vine destroy " 215 

Will he not wake " 219 

Whose crime will bear " 224 

AVill not my tongue be mute " 227 

I'll beg her love " 241 

will not be dismay'd " 273 

will not incline " 292 

this night-owl will catch " 360 

my attempt will bring " 491 

some worthless slave of thine I'll 

slay " 515 

that will never be forgot " 536 

' How will thy shame be seeded " 603 

'This deed will make thee " 610 

will prison false desire " 642 

I will not hear thee " 667 



Will — The scar that will, despite of 

cure, remain R L 732 

with weeping will unfold " 754 

The light will show " 807 

Will quote my loathsome trespass " 812 

will tell my story " 813 

Will couple my reproach " 816 

Will tie the hearers " 818 

upon his silver down will stay " 1012 

I will not wrong " 1060 

never will dispense " 1070 

' I will not poison thee " 1072 

I will not paint " 1074 

that light will borrow " 1083 

will strain a tear " 1131 

I'll hum on Tarquin still " 1133 

Will fix a sharp knife " 1138 

Will we iind out ; and there we will 

unfold " 1146 

Will slay the other " 1162 

His leaves will wither " 1168 

' Yet die I will not " 1177 

to Tarquin I'll bequeath " 1181 

I'll bequeath unto the knife " 1184 

The one will live " 1187 

will kill myself " 1196 

are they form'd as marble will " 1241 

each little mote will peep " 1251 

it will soon be writ " 1295 

I'll tune thy woes " 1465 

wounds will not be sore " 1568 

this night I will inflict " 1630 

I'll murder straight, and then I'll 

slaughter thee " 1634 

this act will bo " 1637 

That they will suflfer " 1832 

We will revenge the death " 1841 

Will be a tatter'd weed Son 2 4 

will be the tomb "37 

Will play the tyrants "53 

The world will wail thee "94 

world will be thy widow "95 

Who will believe " 17 1 

I will not praise " 21 14 

I, not for myself, but for thee will " 22 10 

I will keep so chary " 22 11 

all naked, will bestow " 26 8 

for their style I'll read " 32 14 

Will sourly leave her " 41 8 

thus I will excuse ye " 42 5 

what excuse will my poor beast " 51 5 

Towards thee I'll run " 51 14 

he will not every hour survey " 52 3 

To what you will " 58 11 

That Time will come " 64 12 

will steal his treasure " 75 6 

Thy glass will show " 77 1 

thy mind's imprint will bear " 77 3 

thy glass will truly show " 77 5 

will give thee memory " 77 6 

will hold me up afloat " 80 9 

each part will be forgotten " 81 4 

against myself I'll fight " 88 3 

will be a gainer too " 88 9 

will bear all wrong " 88 14 

And I will comment " 89 2 

and I straight will halt " 89 3 

As I'll myself disgrace " 89 7 

I will acquaintance strangle " 89 8 



WILL 



353 



WIND 



U'ill— against myself I'll vow debate (So«. 89 13 

will not seem so " 90 14 

thy love will stay " 92 3 

and will do none " 94 1 

will be well esteem'd " 96 6 

I'll live in this poor rhyme " 107 11 

I never more will grind " 110 10 

willing patient, I will drink " 111 9 

that I will bitter think " 111 11 

I will be true " 123 14 

still will pluck thee back " 126 6 

, Then will I swear " 132 13 

Myself I'll forfeit " 134 3 

he will not be free " 134 5 

to do will aptly find L C 88 

may stop awhile what will not " 159 

that needs will taste " 167 

to water will not wear " 291 

Therefore I'll lie with love P P 1 13 

but I will prove "35 

to thee I'll constant prove "53 

no rubbing will refresh " 13 8 

looks will calm ere night " 19 14 

too late she will repent " 19 15 

force will yield at length " 19 21 

She will not stick to round " 19 51 

Yet will she blush " 19 53 

we will all the pleasures prove " 20 2 

There will we sit " 20 5 

There will I make thee " 20 9 

they will not cheer thee " 21 12 

None alive will pity me " 21 28 

Every man will be thy friend " 21 35 

No man will supply thy want " 21 38 

Bountiful they will him call " 21 40 

Quickly him they will entice " 21 44 

He will help thee in thy need " 21 52 

If thou sorrow, he will weep " 21 53 

Will — and she, by her good will V A 479 

Come not within his danger by 

thy will " 639 

of his will's obtaining R L 128 

his will resolving " 129 

My will is strong " 243 

frozen conscience and hot-burn- 
ing will " 247 

between her chamber and his will " 302 

My will is back'd " 352 

And in his will his wilful eye " 417 

must my will abide " 486 

My will that marks thee " 487 

But will is deaf " 495 

thy will remove " 614 

command fhy rebel will " 625 

Devours his will " 700 

Self-will himself doth tire " 707 

could not forestall their will " 728 

abridgement of my will I make " 1198 

Shalt oversee this will " 1205 

blotted straight with will " 1299 

thy liking to my will " 1633 

that in your will Son 57 13 

Is it thy will " 61 1 

knowing thy will " 89 7 

Which in their wills " 121 8 

am mortgaged to thy will " 134 2 

thou hast thy 'Will " 135 1 
And 'Will' to boot, and 'Will' in 

overplus " 135 2 

23 



Will— To thy sweet will Son 135 4 

whose will is large " 135 5 

to hide my will in thine " 135 6 

Shall will in others " 135 7 

And in my will " 135 8 

rich in ' Will,' add to thy ' Will " 135 11 
One will of mine, to make thy 

large ' Will ' more " 135 12 

me in that one 'Will " 135 14 

that I was thy ' Will " 136 2 

And will, thy soul knows " 136 3 

'Will' will fulfil the treasure " 136 5 

full with wills, and my will one " 136 6 

for my name is 'Will " 136 14 
So will I pray that thou mayst have 

thy 'Will " 143 13 

in his craft of will L G 126 

Ask'd their own wills, and made 

their wills obey " 133 

with more than love's good will P P 9 7 

left'st me nothing in thy will " 10 8 

And to her will frame all thy ways " 19 25 

Will'd— Be not self-will'd Son 6 13 

Willeth— the insulter willeth VA 550 

Willing— to weep are often willing R L 1237 

that pay the willing loan Son 6 6 

Whilst like a willing patient " HI 9 

Willingly— would willingly impart " 72 8 

Wilt — wilt thou make the match VA 586 

But if thou needs wilt hunt " 673 

And wilt thou be the school R L 617 

Wilt thou be glass wherein " 619 

Or if thou wilt permit " 775 

When wilt thou be humble " 897 

When wilt thou sort an hour '' 899 

thy Lucrece thou wilt see " 1305 

Thou single wilt prove none Son 8 14 

Grant, if thou wilt " 10 . 3 

And do whate'er thou wilt " 19 6 

thou wilt be storn, I fear " 48 13 

so oft as thou wilt look " 77 13 

Then hate me when thou wilt " 90 1 

If thou wilt leave me " 90 9 

wilt thou not haply say " 101 5 

wilt thou be dumb " 101 9 

And yet thou wilt " 133 13 

Thou wilt restore " 134 4 

But thou wilt not " 134 5 

of thy beauty thou wilt take " 134 9 

Wilt thou, whose will " 135 5 

When thou wilt inflame L C 26S 

Win— 'What win I' if I gain RL 211 

win of the watery main Son 64 7 

shalt win much glory " 88 8 

when I saw myself to win " 119 4 

To win me soon to hell " 144 5 

did win whom he would maim L C 312 

To win me soon to hell P P 2 5 

to win a paradise " 3 14 

To win his heart "47 

Wind — breath, whose gentle wind VA 189 

To bid the wind a base " 303 

the high wind sings " 305 

coal revives with wind " 338 

Even as the wind is hush'd " 458 

How he outruns the wind " 681 

now wind, now rain " 965 

As when the wind " 1046 

Nor sun nor wind " 1082 



WIND 



354 



WITH 



Wind— the wind doth hiss you VA 1084 

The wind would blow it off " 1089 

The wind wars with his torch iJ L 311 

Puffs forth another wind " 315 

The doors, the wind, the glove " 325 

Huge rocks, high winds " 335 

And with the wind " 648 

blown with wind of words " 1330 

and busy winds give o'er " 1790 

his thunder, rain, and wind Son 14 6 

Eough winds do shake " 18 3 

though mounted on the wind " 51 7 

hoisted sail to all the winds " 1 17 7 

with sorrow's wind and raiu L C 7 

light occasion of the wind " 86 

When winds breathe sweet " 103 

and falls through wind P P 10 6 
Through the velvet leaves the wind " 17 5 

Words are easy, like the wind " 21 33 

Winding — with a winding maze R L 1151 

Thin winding breath " 1407 

Window — Her two blue windows V A 482 

pry'st thou through my window jB L 1089 

So then through windows Son 3 11 

That hath his windows glazed " 24 8 

Are windows to ray breast " 24 11 

Windy — Then with her .... sighs V A 51 

This windy tempest RL 1788 

Give not a windy night Son 90 7 

Winjr — Shaking her wings V A 57 

wave like feather'd wings " 306 

Borne by the trustless wings R L 2 

with his wings' shade " 507 

from ancient ravens' wings " 949 

his coal-black wings in mire " 1009 

feathers to the learued's wing Son 78 7 

To whose sound chaste wings obey P T 4 

Every fowl of tyrant wing " 10 

Winsred— For fleet-wing'd duty R L 1216 

Her winged spriglit " 1728 

In winged speed no motion Son 51 8 

Wink— He wiuk& and turns his lips F'jl 90 

then wink again " 121 

And I will wink " 122 

To wink, being blinded R L 375 

And moody Pluto winks " 553 

Who if it wink " 1139 

When most I wink Son 43 1 

till they wink with fullness " 56 6 

Winking — yet .... there appears iJ L 458 

Winter — Lust's winter comes V A 802 

As winter meads R L 1218 

But chide rongh winter " 1255 

Why forty winters shall besiege 

thy brow Son 2 1 

To hideous winter "56 

though they with winter meet " 5 13 

let not winter's ragged hand "61 

gusts of winter's day " 13 11 

Or call it winter " 56 13 
How like a winter hath my absence " 97 1 

dreading the winter's near " 97 14 

Yet seem'd it winter still " 98 13 

Three winters cold " 104 3 

age like winter weather PP 12 3 

age like winter bare " 12 4 

Wipe — Worse than a slavish wipe R L 537 

And wipe the dim mist " 643 

Wiped — can be wiped away " 60S 



Wiped — wiped the brinish pearl R L 1213 

forced stain be wiped from me " 1701 

Wire — If hairs be wires, black wires 

grow on her head Son 130 4 

Wiry — The wiry concord, that mine 

ear " 128 4 

Wisdom — Herein lives wisdom " 11 5 

Wise — love is wise in folly V A 838 

Strike the wise dumb " 1146 

old and yet not wise R L 1550 

List the wise world Son 71 13 

Be wise as thou art cruel " 140 1 

what fool is not so wise P P 3 13 

Wise — In howling wise, to see " 18 33 

Wiser — Take counsel of some wiser 

head " 19 5 

Wish— Would they not wish VA 447 

To wish that I their father R L 210 

The sweets we wish for " 867 

that best I wish in thee Son 37 13 

and wish I were renew'd " 111 8 

And wish her lays P P 15 6 

Wish—\Nil\i virtuous wish would Son 16 7 

This wish I have " 37 14 

Whoever hath her wish "135 1 

Wisli'd — thrice more more rare " 56 14 

eyes their wished sight P P 15 10 
Wish'd himself the heaven's breath " 17 8 

burn'd in heart-wish'd luxury L C 314 

Wishing — Wishing her cheeks V A 65 

Wishing Adonis had his team " 179 

Wishing me like to one Son 29 5 

Wistly— wistly to view VA 343 

wistly on him gazed R L 1355 

Yet not so wistly P P 6 12 

Wit — how doth she now for wits V A 249 

Fair fall the wit " 472 

wit waits on fear " 690 

humour of fantastic wits " 850 

without ten women's wit " 1008 

and, all for want of wit R L 153 

confounds his wits " 290 

the harvest of his wits " 859 

Lending him wit " 964 

What wit sets down " 1299 

Began to clothe his wit " 1809 

And arm'd his long-hid wits " 1816 

long-experienced wit to school " 1820 

belongs to love's fine wit Son 23 14 

not to show my wit " 26 4 

which wit so poor as mine "26 5 

birth, or wealth, or wit " 37 5 

the wits of former days " 59 13 

shall fame his wit " 84 11 

If I might teach thee wit " 140 5 
But my five wits nor my five senses " 141 9 

to make our wits more keen L C 161 

With wit well blazon'd " 217 

Witchcraft— what a hell of " 288 

Witli — the sun with purple-colour'd 

face VA 1 

with herself at strife " ' 11 

hath ending with thy life " 12 

smother thee with kisses " 18 

cloy thy lips with loathed satiety " 19 

pale with fresh variety " 21 

With this she seizeth " 25 

With leaden appetite, unapt " 34 

with lustful language broken " 47 



WITH 



355 



WITH 



With — He burns with bashful shame ; 

she with her tears VA 49 

Then with her windy sighs " 51 

she murders with a kiss " 54 

Tires with her beak " 56 

dew'd with such distilling showers " 66 

better'd with a more delight " 78 

take truce with her contending 

tears " 82 

' Touch but my lips with those fair 

lips " 115 

with thy hand felt " 143 

a nymph, with long dishevell'd hair " 147 

with thy increase be fed " 170 

With burning eye did hotly over- 
look " 178 

Adonis, with a lazy spright " 181 

with a heavy, dark, disliking eye " 182 

quench them with my tears " 192 

with his hard hoof he wounds " 267 

what he was controlled with " 270 

With gentle majesty " 278 

with his proud sight agrees " 288 

His art with nature's workman- 
ship at strife " 291 

Beating his kind embracements 

with her heels " 312 

With her the horse, and " 322 

All swoln with chafing " 325 

swelleth with more rage " ..... 332 

coal revives with wind " 388 

And with his bonnet hides " 339 

Looks on the dull earth with dis- 
turbed mind " 340 

With one fair hand she heaveth " 351 

With tears, which chorus-like " 360 

master'd with a leathern rein " 392 

and all but with a breath " 414 

hurt my hand with wringing " 421 

now press'd with bearing " 430 

illumined with her eye " 486 

clouded with his brow's repine " 490 

Measure my strangeness with my 

unripe years " 524 

comforter, with weary gait " 529 

with her plenty press'd, she faint 

with dearth " 545 

With blindfold fury she begins " 554 

weary, with her hard embracing " 559 

tamed with too much handling " 560 

that's tired with chasing " 561 

still'd with dandling " 562 

but dissolves with tempering " 5G5 

compass'd oft with venturing " 567 

with certain of his friends " 588 

deceived with painted grapes " 601 

kindle with continual kissing " 606 

With javelin's point " 616 

with hairy bristles arm'd " 625 

to do with such foul fiends " 638 

all stain'd with gore " 664 

make them droop with grief " 666 

encounter with the boar " 672 

keep with thy hounds " 678 

and with what care " 681 

crosses with a thousand doubles " 682 

sorteth with a herd of deer " 689 

with others being mingled " 691 

With much ado " 694 



With— with listening ear VA 698 

indenting with the way " 704 

in love with thee " 722 

mingle beauty with infirmities " 735 

with impure defeature " 736 

melts with the mid-day sun " 750 

blotting it with blame " 796 

With this, he breaketh " 811 

with the melting clouds contend " 820 

with such-like sport " 844 

salutes him with this fair good- 
morrow " 859 

With cold-pale weakness numbs " 892 

And with that word she spied " 900 

bepainted all with red " 901 

is mated with delays " 909 

In hand with all things " 912 

he replies with howling " 918 

Whereon with fearful eyes they 

long have gazed " 927 

Infusing them with dreadful pro- 
phecies " 928 

ruin'd with thy rigour " 954 

And with his strong course opens " 960 

With Death she humbly doth in- 
sinuate " 1012 

with him is beauty slain " 1019 

As one with treasure laden, 

hemm'd with thieves " 1022 

unwitnessed with eye or ear " 1023 

with false bethinking grieves " 1024 

as murder'd with the view " 1031 

in his shelly cave with pain " 1034 

consort with ugly night " 1041 

wound the heart with looks again " 1042 

Which with cold terror doth " 1048 

With purple tears, that his wound 

wept, was drench'd " 1054 

seem'd with him to bleed " 1056 

lived and died with him " 1080 

Play with his locks " 1090 

fed them with his sight, they him 

with berries " 1104 

ran upon the boar with his sharp 

spear " 1112 

With kissing him I should have 

kill'd him " 1118 

My youth with his ; the more " 1120 

With this she falleth . " 1121 

stains her face with his congealed 

blood " 1122 

waited on with jealousy " 1137 

With sweets that shall " 1144 

enrich the poor with treasures " 1150 

chequer'd with white " 1168 

girdle with embracing ilames B L 6 

With pure aspects did him " 14 

with swift intent he goes " 46 

stain that o'er with silver white " 56 

answers with surmise " 83 

colour'd with his high estate " 92 

cloy'd with much " 98 

coped with stranger eyes " 99 . 

And decks with praises " 108 

With bruised arms " 110 

Her joy with heaved-up hand she 

doth express " Ill 

with heavy spright " 121 

With modest Lucrece " 123 



WITH 



356 



WITH 



With— with life's strength doth fight JJ 

are with gain so fond 

With honour, wealth, and ease 

torments lis with defect 

bewitch'd with lust's foul charm 

Here pale with fear 

With your unclcanness 

shamed with the note 

Would with the sceptre straight 
be strucken down 

charge me with so black a deed 

with trembling terror die 

And with good thoughts makes 
dispensation 

tremble with her loyal fear 

smiled with so sweet a cheer 

steals with open listening ear 

cross him with their opposite per- 
suasion 

But with a pure appeal seeks 

wars with his torch 

Who with a lingering stay his 
course doth let 

Which with a yielding latch, and 
with no more 

will is back'd with resolution 

sin is clear'd with absolution 

And with his knee the door he opens 

blinded with a greater light 

With pearly sweat 

play'd with her breath 

circled with blue 

With more than admiration he 
admired 

Smoking with pride 

And fright her with confusion 

daunts them with more dreadful 
sights 

with vehement prayers urgeth 

Where thou with patience must 

sought with all my might 

guarded with a sting 

Coucheth the fowl below with his 
wings' shade 

With trembling fear 

kill thine honour with thy life's 
decay 

blurr'd with nameless bastardy 

Here with a cockatrice' dead-kill- 
ing eye 

though marble wear with raining 

eloquence with sighs is mixed 

With such black payment 

moved with woman's moans 

Be moved with my tears 

wounded with their continual mo- 
tion 

With foul oflfenders thou perforce 
must bear 

wrapp'd in with infamies 

with the wind in greater fury fret 

with their fresh falls' haste 

Till with her own white fleece 

For with the nightly linen 

eyes with sorrow shed 

with lank and lean discolour'd cheek 

With heavy eye 

doth fight with Grace 

So fares it with this faultful lord 



124 
134 
142 
151 
173 
183 
193 
208 

217 
226 
231 

248 
261 
264 
283 

286 
293 
311 



339 
352 
354 
359 
375 
396 
400 
407 

418 
438 
445 

462 
475 
486 
488 
493 

507 
511 

516 

522 

540 

560 
563 
576 
587 
588 



612 
636 
648 
650 
678 
680 
683 
708 
709 
712 
715 



With — with foul insurrection RL 722 

with her nails her flesh doth tear " 739 

sweating with guilty fear " 740 

cloak ofiences with a cunning brow " 749 

with weeping will unfold " 754 

Frantic with grief " 762 

With close-tongued treason " 770 

' With rotten damps ravish " 778 

I have no one to blush with me " 792 

hang their heads with mine " 793 

Seasoning the earth with showers " 796 

Mingling my talk with tears, my 

grief with groans " 797 

lies martyr'd with disgrace " 802 

fright her crying babe with Tar- 

quin's name " 814 

infect fair founts with venom mud " 850 

Is plagued with cramps " 856 

take root with precious flowers " 870 

meet with Opportunity " 903 

have to do with thee " 911 

ruinate proud buildings with thy 

hours " 944 

smear with dust " 945 

fill with worm-holes " 946 

To feed oblivion with decay of 

things " 947 

cheer the ploughman with in- 

creaseful crops " 958 

waste huge stones with little water 

drops " 959 

With some mischance cross " 968 

Disturb his hours of rest with rest- 
less trances " 974 

Alttict him in his bed with bedrid 

groans " 975 

Stone him with harden'd hearts " 978 

shame his hope with deeds degen- 
erate " 1003 

fly with the filth " 1010 

gazed upon with every eye " 1015 

serves with dull debaters " 1019 

cavil with mine infamy " 1025 

flatter thee with an infringed oath " 1061 

laugh with his companions " 1066 

Basely with gold " 1068 

And with my trespass never will 

dispense " 1070 

poison thee with my attaint " 1072 

night with slow-sad gait descended " 1081 

Mock with thy tickling beams " 1090 

Brand not my forehead with thy 

piercing light " 1091 

cavils she with every thing " 1093 

his mood with nought agrees " 1095 

With too much labour drowns " 1099 

Holds disputation with each thing " 1101 

Make her moans mad with their 

sweet melody " 1108 

pleased with grief's society " 1111 

When with like semblance " 1113 

Grief dallied with nor law nor 

limit knows " 1120 

kept with tears " 1127 

And with deep groans " 1132 

encompass'd with a winding maze " 1151 

So with herself is she in mutiny " 1153 

But with my body " 1157 

with greater patience bear it " 1158 



WITH 



357 



WITH 



With— engirt with daring infamy R L 1173 

With untuned tongue she hoarsely 

calls " 1214 

duty with thought's feathers flies " 1216 

With soft-slow tongue " 1220 

over-wash'd with woe " 1225 

with swelling drops 'gan wet " 1228 

cover crimes with bold stern looks " 1252 

With men's abuses " 1259 

Assail'd by night with circum- 
stances strong " 1262 

Yet with the fault I thus far can 

dispense " 1279 

Bid him with speed prepare " 1294 

liovering o'er the paper with her 

quill " 1297 

blotted straiglat with will " 1299 

Ere she with blood had stain'd " 1316 

With words, till action " ..... 1323 

blown with wind of words " 1330 

with more than haste " 1332 

blushing on her with a steadfast eye " 1339 

with bashful innocence doth hie " 1341 

And blushing with him " 1355 

Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion 

with annoy " 1370 

Begrimed with sweat, and smeared 

all with dust " 1381 

Gazing upon the Greeks with lit- 
tle lust " 1384 

marching on with trembling paces " 1391 

Making such sober action with his 

hand " 1403 

listening, but with several graces " 1410 

debate with angry swords " 1421 

With swelling ridges ; and " 1439 

Staring on Priam's wounds with 

her old eyes " 1448 

Her cheeks with chaps and wrin- 
kles were disguised " 1452 

tune thy woes with my lamenting 

tongue " 1463 

with my tears quench Troy " 1468 

with my knife scratch out " ..;.. 1469 

with my nails her beauty I may 

tear " 1472 

bright with fame and not with fire " 1491 

with his own weight goes " 1494 

with the blunt swains he goes " 1504 

labour'd with his skill " 1506 

blot with hell-born sin " 1519 

with grief or travail he had fainted " 1543 

With outward honesty " 1545 

With inward vice " 1546 

doth quake with cold " 1556 

burn his Troy witli water " 1561 

tears the senseless Sinon with her 

nails " 1564 

with this gives o'er " 1567 

weary time with her complaining " 1570 

too long with her remaining " 1572 

she with painted images hath spent " 1577 

kill'd with deadly cares " 1593 

Three times with sighs she gives " 1604 

With sad attention long to hear " 1610 

tell them all with one poor tired 

tongue " 1617 

With shining falchion in my cham- 
ber came " 1626 



With— with a flaming light E L 1627 

' With this, I did begin " 1G39 

with so strong a fear " 1647 

stain'd witli this abuse " 1655 

With liead declined, and voice 

damm'd up with woe " 1661 

With sad-set eyes " 1662 

that came with Collatine " 1689 

With swift pursuit to venge " 1691 

chase injustice with revengeful 

arms " 1693 

with noble disposition " 1695 

eonstrain'd with dreadful circum- 

stauce " 1703 

with the foul act dispense " 1704 

With this, they all " 1709 

While with a joyless smile " 1711 

carved in it with tears " 1713 

Here with a sigh " 1716 

astonish'd with this deadly deed " 1730 

to die with her " 1776 

weep with equal strife " 1791 

with clamours fill'd " 1804 

He with the Romans was esteem'd " 1811 

idiots are with kings " 1812 

But kneel with me " 1830 

rouse our Roman gods with invo- 
cations " 1831 

done with speedy diligence " 1853 

Feed'st thy light's flame with self- 
substantial fuel Son 1 6 
thine image dies with thee " 3 14 
having traffic with thyself alone "49 
must be tomb'd with thee " 4 13 
that with gentle work did frame "51 
Sap check'd with frost "57 
Beauty's effect with beauty were 

bereft " " 5 11 

they with winter meet " 5 13 

With beauty's treasure "64 

Serving with looks "74 

with weary car "79 

Sweets with sweets war not "82 
receivest with pleasure thine annoy "84 

possess'd with murderous hate " 10 5 

silver'd o'er with white " 12 4 
Borne on the bier with white and 

bristly beard " 12 8 

Or say with princes "14 7 

Time debateth with Decay " 15 11 

all in war with Time " 15 13 

With means more blessed " 16 4 

With virtuous wish would bear " 16 7 

fill'd with your most high deserts " 17 2 

yellow'd with their age " 17 9 

O, carve not with tliy hours " 19 9 
draw no lines there with thine 

antique pen " 19 10 

with nature's own hand painted " 20 1 

With shifting change " 20 4 
So is it not with me as with that 

Muse " 21 1 
every fair with his fair doth re- 
hearse " 21 4 
With sun and moon, with earth 

and sea's rich gems " 21 6 

With April's first-born " 21 7 

Who with his fear is put besides " 23 2 

replete with too much rage " 23 3 



WITH 



358 



WITH 



With — O'ercharged with burtlien Son 

To liear with eyes " 

glazed with thine eyes " 

in favour with their stars " 

graciously with fair aspect " 

Weary with toil " 

with travel tired " 

in disgrace with fortune " 

with my bootless cries • " 

like him with friends possess'd " 

"With what I most enjoy contented " 

change my state with kings " 

And with old woes new wail " 

bosom is endeared with all hearts " 

Hung with the trophies " 

my bones with dust shall cover " 
Compare them with the bettering 

of the time " 
grown with this growing age " 
with sovereign eye " 
Kissing with golden face " 
Gilding pale streams with heav- 
enly alchemy " 
With ugly rack " 
with this disgrace " 
With all triumphant splendour " 
Authorizing thy trespass with 

compare " 

that do with me remain " 

with public kindness honour me " 

with manners may I sing " 
entertain the time with thoughts 

of love " 

Kill me with spites " 

with thy much clearer light " 

attend time's leisure with my moan " 

Are both with thee " 

with swift motion slide " 

with two alone " 

oppress'd with melancholy " 

pierced with crystal eyes " 

heart in love with sighs " 
With my love's picture then my 

eye doth feast " 

art present still with me " 
And I am still with them and they 

with me " 

greet me with that sun " 

tired with my woe " 

he answers with a groan " 

with my desire keep pace " 

besraear'd with sluttish time " 

they wink with fullness " 

with a perpetual dullness " 

question with my jealous thought " 

could with a backward look " 

changing place with that which " 

with others all too near " 

chopp'd with tann'd antiquity " 

Painting my age with beauty " 
AVith Time's injurious hand crush'd " 

With lines and wrinkles " 
Increasing store with loss and loss 

with store " 

How with this rage shall beauty " 

Tired with all these " 

Tired with all these " 

with infection should he live " 

And with his presence grace " 



23 


8 


23 


14 


24 


8 


25 


1 


26 


10 


27 


1 


27 


2 


29 


1 


29 


3 


29 


6 


29 


8 


29 


14 


30 


4 


31 


1 


31 


10 


32 


3 


32 


5 


32 


10 


33 


2 


33 


3 


33 


4 


33 


6 


33 


8 


33 


10 


35 


6 


36 


3 


36 


11 


39 


1 


39 


11 


40 


14 


43 


7 


44 


12 


45 


2 


45 


4 


45 


7 


45 


8 


46 


6 


47 


4 


47 


5 


47 


10 


47 


12 


49 


6 


50 


5 


50 


11 


51 


9 


55 


4 


56 


6 


56 


8 


57 


9 


59 


5 


60 


3 


61 


14 


62 


10 


62 


14 


63 


2 


63 


4 


64 


8 


65 


3 


66 


1 


66 


13 


67 


1 


67 


2 



Vith— lace itself with his society Son 

with outward praise is crown'd " 

with vilest worms to dwell " 

compounded am with clay " 

even with my life decay " 

mock you with nje " 

Consumed with that " 

still with thee shall stay " 

this with thee remains " 

to be with you alone " 

all full with feasting " 

with the time do I not glance aside " 
And arts with thy sweet graces 

graced be " . 
Eeserve their character with gold- 
en quill " 
gulls him with intelligence " 
With mine own weakness being 

best acquainted " 

Join with the spite of fortune " 

Compared with loss of thee " 

vex me with inconstant mind " 

thy looks with me " 

with base infection meet " 

big with rich increase " 

'tis with so dull a cheer " 

laugh'd and leap'd with him " 
As with your shadow I with these 

did play " 
with his colour flx'd " 
greet it with my laj-s " 
dull you with my song " 
look'd but with divining eyes " 
Now with the drops " 
not with the time exchanged " 
do you with Fortune chide " 
with my neglect I do dispense " 
replete with you " 
being crown'd with you " 
with his gust is 'greeing " 
bends with the remover to remove " 
alters not with his brief hours " 
been with unknown minds " 
With eager compounds we our pal- 
ate urge " 
character'd with lasting memory " 
built up with newer might " 
flowers with flowers gather'd " 
nor grows with heat nor drowns 

with showers " 
With my extern the outward hon- 
ouring " 
not mix'd with seconds " 
slander'd with a bastard shame " 
Fairing the foul with art's false 

borrow'd face " 
Slandering creation with a false 

esteem " 

With thy sweet fingers " 

with those dancing chips " 

fingers walk with gentle gait " 

belied with false compare " 

torments me with disdain " 

Looking with pretty ruth " 

fill it full with wills " 

with ease we prove " 

I lie with her and she with me " 
Wound me not with thine eye, but 

with thy tongue " 



67 


4 


69 


5 


71 


4 


71 


10 


71 


12 


71 


14 


73 


12 


74 


4 


74 


14 


75 


7 


75 


9 


76 


3 



78 12 



85 


3 


86 


10 


88 


5 


90 


3 


90 


14 


92 


9 


93 


4 


94 


11 


97 


6 


97 


13 


98 


4 


98 


14 


101 


6 


102 


6 


102 


14 


106 


11 


107 


9 


109 


7 


lU 


1 


112 


12 


113 


13 


114 


1 


114 


U 


116 


4 


116 


11 


117 


5 


118 


2 


122 


2 


123 


2 


124 


4 



124 12 

125 2 
125 11 
127 4 

127 6 



127 


12 


128 


3 


128 


10 


128 


11 


130 


14 


132 


2 


132 


4 


136 


6 


136 


7 


138 


13 



WITH 



359 



WITHOUT 



139 


4 


139 


7 


139 


14 


140 


2 


141 


1 


141 


5 


141 


8 


142 


3 


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8 


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9 


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10 


148 


2 


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10 


148 


13 


149 


2 


149 


8 


150 


2 


150 


12 



With — Use power With power Son 

wound with cunning " 

Kill me outright with looks " 

with too much disdain " 

love thee with mine eyes " 

with thy tongue's tune delighted " 
To any sensual feast with thee alone " 
but with mine compare " 

Wooing his purity with her foul 

pride " 

she alter'd with an end " 

frantic-mad with evermore unrest " 
correspondence with true sight " 
vex'd with watching and with tears " 
with tears thou keep'st me " 

myself with thee partake " 

Revenge upon myself with present 

moan " 

With insufficiency my heart to sway " 
With others thou shouldst not abhor " 
Storming her world with sorrow's 

wind L C 7 

With sleided silk feat " 48 

with his hearing to divide " 67 

with his authorized youth " 104 

To dwell with him " 129 

What with his art in youth " 145 

With safest distance I mine honour 

shielded " 151 

with acture they may be " 185 

With twisted metal amorously 

impleach'd " 205 

With the annexions of fair gems 

enrich'd . " 208 

With objects manifold " 216 

With wit well blazon'd " 217 

Hallow'd with sighs " 228 

with bleeding groans they pine " 275 

With brinish current downward 

flow'd " 284 

glazed with crystal gate " 286 

But with the inundation " 290 

with the garment of a Grace " 316 

Outfacing faults in love with love's 

ill rest PP 1 8 

lie with love, and love with me " 1 13 
Wooing his purity with her fair 

pride "28 

With. young Adonis "42 

with many a lovely look "43 

with such an earthly tongue " 5 14 

look'd on the world with glorious 

eye " 6 11 

with damask dye to grace "75 

as straw with fire flameth " 7 13 

Adonis comes with horn "96 

with more than love's good will "97 
deep-wounded with a boar " 9 10 

with young Adonis sitting " 11 1 

And with her lips on his " 11 10 

cabin hang'd with care " 14 3 

for I supp'd with sorrow " 14 6 

welcome daylight with her ditty " 15 7 
solace mix'd with sorrow " 15 11 

Were I with her " 15 13 

love with love did fight " 16 5 

was wounded with disdain " 16 11 

Thus art with arms contending " 16 13 
Fraughted with gall " 18 26 



With— Smooth not thy tongue with 

filed talk PP 19 8 

with scorn she put away " 19 is 

Serve always with assured trust " 19 31 
Dissembled with an outward show " 19 38 

still to strive with men " 19 43 
When time with age shall them 

attaint " 19 46 

Live with me " 20 1 
With a thousand fragrant posies " 20 10 

with leaves of myrtle " 20 12 

With coral clasps " 20 14 

Then live with me . " 20 16 

To live with thee " 20 20 

And with such-like " 21 41 

He with thee doth bear a part " 21 56 

With the breath thou givest P T 19 

Withal— spend the night withal VA S47 

that his hand shakes withal R L 467 

I, sick withal, the help Son 153 11 

Withdrew — themselves withdrew V A 1032 

Wither — they wither in their prime " 418 

To wither in my breast ■ " 1182 

wither at the cedar's root B L 665 

His leaves will wither " 1168 

Wither'd — against the flower " 1254 

As flowers dead lie wither'd P P 13 9 

Withering — Thy lovers withering Son 126 4 

Withhold — to withhold me so VA 612 

Within — Beauty within itself " 130 

Within the circuit " 230 

Within this limit " 235 

Come not within his danger " 689 

Within my bosom " 646 

within her bosom it shall dwell " 1173 

Within whose face R L 52 

Within his thought " 288 

Thy sea within a puddle's womb 

is hearsed " 657 

Within your hollow-swelling " 1122 

within their bosoms lie " 1342 

Within thine own bud Son 1 11 
within thine own deep-sunken eyes "27 

Within the gentle closure " 48 11 

Within the knowledge " 49 10 

within that pen doth dwell " 84 5 
Within his bending sickle's compass " 116 10 

within the level of your frown " 117 11 

foul as hell within . " 119 2 

are within my brain "122 1 

pine within and suffer dearth " 146 3 

Within be fed, without " 146 12 

dead within an hour PP 13 6 

Without — End without audience VA 846 

without ten women's wit " 1008 

eyes of men without an orator R L 30 

Without the bed her other " 393 

without or yea or no " 1340 

quoth she, ' without a sound " 1464 

Without this, folly Son 11 6 

travel forth without my cloak " 34 2 

Without thy help " 36 4 

the world-without-end hour " 57 5 

Without accusing you " 58 8 

Without all ornament " 68 10 

Without all bail " 74 2 

mayst without attaint o'erlook " 82 2 

fed, without be rich no more " 146 12 

As it was, or best without L C 98 



WITHOUT 



360 



WONT 



Without — sees thee without wonder PP 5 9 

a nay is placed without remove " 18 12 
Witness — ' Witness this primrose 

bank VA 151 

Witness the entertainment " 1108 

To witness duty, not to show Son 26 4 

To this I witness call " 124 13 

on another's neck do witness bear " 131 11 

What unapproved witness L C 53 

Wittily — love did wittily prevent VA 471 

Witty — wise in folly, foolish-witty " 838 

Woe — her woes the more increasing " 254 

woe unto the birds " 455 

comment upon every woe " 714 

and twenty times, 'Woe, woe " 833 

still concludes in woe " 839 

throng her constant woe " 967 

Thy weal and woe " 987 

shall not match his woe " 1140 

fellowship in woe doth woe as- 
suage a L 790 

Base watch of woes " 928 

date of never-ending woes " 935 

old woes, not infant sorrows " 1096 

Deep woes roll forward " 1118 

To keep thy sharp woes waking " 1136 

fair cheeks over-washed with woe " 1225 

My woes are tedious " 1309 

the tenour of her woe " 1310 

a part of woe doth bear " 1327 

So woe hath wearied woe " 1363 

her sorrow to the beldam's woes " 1458 

I'll tune thy woes " 1465 

be freed from guilty woe " 1482 

she weeps Troy's painted woes " 1492 

Patience seem'd to scorn his woes " 1505 

that seem'd to welcome woe " 1509 

Though woe be heavy " 1574 

Losing her woes in shows " 1580 

discharge one word of woe " 1605 

In me moe woes than words " 1615 

voice damm'd up with woe " 1661 

Which speechless woe of his " 1674 

My woe too sensible " 1678 

To drown one woe " 1680 

as pitying Lucrece' woes " 1747 

' Woe, woe,' quoth Collatine " 1802 

such emulation in their woe " 1808 

is woe the cure for woe " 1821 

And with old woes new wail Son 30 4 

love's long-since-cancell'd woe " 30 7 

from woe to woe tell o'er " 30 10 

badges of either's woe " 44 14 

tired with my woe " 50 5 

then should make you woe " 71 8 

in the rearward of a conquered woe " 90 6 
strains of woe which now seem 

woe " 90 13 

0, that our night of woe " 120 9 

becoming of their woe " 127 13 

and proved, a very woe " 129 11 

That season'd woe had pelleted L C 18 

shrieking undistinguish'd woe " 20 

grounds and motives of her woe " 63 

' But, woe is me " /8 

Woeful— a woeful ditty VA 836 

the woeful words she told " ..... 1126 

A woeful hostess brooks not R L 1125 

she saw my woeful state Son 145 4 



Woeful— My woeful self L C 143 

Wolf— Or as the wolf doth grin VA 459 

the wolf would leave his prey " 1097 

No noise but owls' and wolves' RL 165 

The wolf hath seized his prey " 677 

Thou set'st the wolf " 878 

might the stern wolf betray Son 96 9 

Woman — Art thou a woman's son V A 201 

but of no woman bred " 214 

and never woman yet " 1007 

without ten women's wit " 1008 

moved with woman's moans R L 587 

And let mild women " 979 

men have marble, women waxen, 

minds " 1240 

Poor women's faces " 1253 

Poor women's faults " 1258 

Make weak-made women " 1260 

A woman's face Son 20 1 
A woman's gentle heart "20 3 
as is false women's fashion " 20 4 
and women's souls amazeth " 20 8 
And for a woman wert thou " 20 9 
pricked thee out for women's pleas- 
ure " 20 13 
when a woman woos, what wo- 
man's son " 41 7 
a woman colour'd ill " 144 4 
a woman colour'd ill P P 2 4 
A woman I forswore "35 
More in women than in men " 18 IS 
•Had women been so strong " 19 23 
guiles that women work " 19 37 
A woman's nay doth stand " 19 42 
Think women still to strive " 19 43 
One woman would another wed " 19 48 
If to women he be bent " 21 45 

Womb — Whose hollow. ...resounds Fji 268 

From earth's dark womb R L 549 

Tliy sea within a puddle's womb " 657 

so fair whose unear'd womb Son 3 5 

the womb wherein they grew " 86 4 

Like widow'd wombs " 97 8 

whose concave womb reworded LO 1 

Won— Won in the fields R L 107 

And he hath won " 688 

and therefore to be won Son 41 5 

Wonder — Vouchsafe, thou wonder V A 13 

gazer late did wonder " 748 

' Wonder of time " 1133 

In silent wonder R L 84 

too much wonder of his eye " 95 

wonder of your frame Son 59 10 

Nor did I wonder " 98 9 

Have eyes to wonder " 106 14 

that sees thee without wonder PP 5 9 

But in them it were a wonder P T 32 

Wondering — wondering each other's 

chance RL 1596 

Who wondering at him " 1845 

Not wondering at the present Son 123 10 

Wondrous — at vantage, — . ...dread F^ 635 

the painter for his wondrous skill RL 1528 

in a wondrous excellence Son 105 6 

which wondrous scope affords " 105 12 

Wont — Where thou wast wont to 

rest R L 1621 

When I was wont to greet it Son 102 6 

that wont to have play'd PP 18 29 



WONTED 



361 



WORLD 



Wonted — whose wonted lily white VA 1053 

His wonted height BL 776 

Woo — 'gins to woo him VA 6 

Then woo thyself " 159 

to see him woo her " 309 

But then woos best " 570 

And when a woman woos So7i 41 7 

Whom thine eyes woo " 142 10 

did ne'er invite, nor never woo L C 182 

began to woo him P P 11 2 

Wood— unto the wood they hie VA 823 

in some mistrustful wood " 826 

Upon that blessed wood Son 128 2 

At the wood's boldness " 128 8 

Making dead wood more blest " 128 12 

Wood — pestilence and frenzies wood F^ 740 

Woodnian — He is no woodman El, 580 

Woo'd — I have been woo'd VA 97 

Her eyes woo'd still " 358 

being woo'd of time Son 70 fi 

Wooing — eyes disdain'd the ... . VA 358 

wooing his purity Son 144 8 

AVooing his purity P P 2 8 

Word — but speak fair words VA 208 

Her words are done " 254 

Free vent of words " 334 

ere his words begun " 462 

Foul words and frowns " 573 

And with that word " 900 

Even at this word " 1025 

the woeful words she told " 1126 

haste her words delays R L 552 

Out, idle words, servants " 1016 

This helpless smoke of words " 1027 

Sometime her grief is dumb and 

hath no words " 1105 

though my words are brief " 1309 

With words, till action might be- 
come them " 1323 

being blown with wind of words " 1330 

but laid no words to gage " 1351 

loss of Nestor's golden words " 1420 

And bitter words to ban " 1460 

She lends them words " 1498 

Whose words, like wildfire " 1523 

discharge one word of woe " 1605 

long to hear her words " 1610 

' Few words,' quoth she " 1613 

In me moe woes than words " 1615 

live to speak another word " 1642 

heart-easing words so long " 1782 

Weak words, so thick come " 1784 

For sportive words " 1813 

did his words allow " 1845 

wanting words to show it Son 26 6 
That every word doth almost tell " 76 7 

dressing old words new " 76 11 

and he stole that word " 79 9 

The dedicated words " 82 3 

In true plain words " 82 12 

whilst other write good words " 85 5 

Though words come hindmost " 85 12 

the breath of words respect " 85 13 

varying to other words " 105 10 
Lest sorrow lend me words, and 

words express " 140 3 

and words merely but art L C 174 

a word for shadows like myself P P 14 11 

Words are easy like the wind " 21 33 



Wordless— so greets heaven R L 112 

Wore— livery that he wore VA 1107 

and wore out the night R L 123 

her face wore sorrow's livery " 1222 

Work — her best work is ruin'd VA 954 

to work upon his wife R L 235 

Thus treason works " 361 

force must work my way " 513 

in this work was had " 1385 

imaginary work was there " 1422 

So Lucrece set a-work " 1496 

with gentle work did frame Son 5 1 
To work my mind, when body's 

work's expired " 27 4 

the work of masonry " 55 6 

In others' works " 78 11 

To what it works in "1117 

Which works on leases " 124 10 

Works under you L C 230 

guiles that women work P P 19 37 

Work'st— Why thou mischief R L 960 

Working — thy heart's workings be Son 93 11 

Workman- The well-skiU'd .... R L 1520 

Workmanship— at strife VA 291 

workmanship of nature " 734 

World — the world hath ending " 12 

Look, the world's comforter " 529 

all the world amazes " 634 

lend the world his light " 756 

the world will hold thee " 761 

Who doth the world " ■ 857 

Look, how the world's poor people " 925 

Alas, poor world, what treasure " 1075 

Thus weary of the world " 1189 

fortress'd from a world of harms R L 28 

Proving from world's minority " 67 

Upon the world dim darkness " 118 

her life, her world's delight " 385 

A pair of maiden worlds " 408 

These worlds in Tarquin " 411 

the world doth threat " 547 

which the world might bear " 1321 

the world's fresh ornament Son 1 9 

Pity the world " 1 13 

To eat the world's due " 1 14 

Thou dost beguile the world "34 

The world will wail thee "94 

The world will be thy widow "95 

in the world doth spend "99 

for still the world enjoys it " 9 10 

hath in the world an end " 9 11 

make the world away " 11 8 

To the wide world " 19 7 
from the forlorn world his visage 

hide " 33 7 

Suns of the world may stain " 33 14 

That wear this world out " 55 12 

the old world could say " 59 9 

world's eye doth view " 69 1 

Give warning to the world " 71 3 

From this vile world " 71 4 

Lest the wise world " 71 13 
O, lest the world should task you " 72 1 

the world may see " 75 8 

to all the world must die " 81 6 

breathers of this world are dead " 81 12 

Now while the world is bent " 90 2 

Of the wide world dreaming " 107 2 

You are my all-the-world " 112 5 



WORLD 



362 



WOULD 



World— That all the world Son 112 14 

All this the world well knows " 129 13 

wide world's common place " 137 10 

in the world's false subtleties " 138 i 

world is grown so bad " 140 11 

What means the world to say " 148 6 

Storming her world L C 7 

in the world's false forgeries P P 1 4 
'Gainst whom the world "32 

The sun look'd on the world " 6 11 

If that the world and love " 20 17 

World-witliout-end— the hour Son 57 5 

VA 621 

" 983 



1248 
14 
4 
10 

7 



Worm — eyes, like glow-worms 

earth's worm, what dost thou " 

Why should the worm intrude E L 

the little worms that creep " 

and make worms thine heir Son 6 

with vilest worms to dwell " 71 

The prey of worms " 74 

Shall worms, inheritors of this " 146 

Worm-hole — To fill with worm -holesi2i 946 

Wormwood — to bitter .... taste " 893 

Worn-out — pattern of the .... age " 1350 

Worse — were thy liijs the worse V A 

worse than Tantalus' is her annoy " 

mischief worse than civil home- 
bred strife " 

like you worse and worse " 

Worse than a slavish wipe R L 

To subjects worse have given Son 59 

Not making worse what nature " 84 

which makes your praises worse " 84 

smell far worse than weeds " 94 

And worse essays prove thee " 110 

Worser — Urging the worser sense R L 

takes the worser part " 

but she, in worser taking " 

The worser spirit a woman Son 144 

My worser spirit a woman P P 2 

Worship — doth worship thy defect Son 149 
Worshipper — suspecteth the false 

worshipper R L 

Worst — The worst is but denial " 

He in the worst sense construes " 

Yet do thy worst, old Time Son 19 

The worst was this " 80 

At first the very worst " 90 

But do thy worst " 92 

fear the worst of wrongs " 92 

take the worst to be " 137 

thy worst all best exceeds " 150 

Worth — prove nothing worth V A 

that's worth the viewing " 

of small worth held Son 2 

Neither in inward worth " 16 

of thy worth and truth " 37 

ten times more in worth " 38 

O, how thy worth with manners " 39 

Like stones of worth " 52 

Praising thy worth " 60 

mine own worth do define " 62 

in all worths surmount " 62 

Thy worth the greater " 70 

to love things nothing worth " 72 

The worth of that " 74 

But since your worth " 80 

Finding thy worth a limit " 82 
Speaking of worth, what worth in 

you doth grow " 83 



242 

324 

13 

14 

12 

1 

5 

4 

8 

418 

1076 

4 

11 

4 

9 

1 

7 

14 

7 

8 

6 

14 

13 

5 

6 



Worth— The charter of thy worth Son 87 3 
thy own worth then not knowing " 87 9 
all bare, is of more worth " 103 3 

skill enough your worth to sing " 106 12 
Whose worth's unknown " 116 8 

dear nature, worth, and quality L C 210 

what are precepts worth " 267 

Wortliier — the travail of a ... . pen Son 79 6 
Worthiness — whose .... gives scope " 52 13 

Worthless — some slave of thine R L 515 

I am a worthless boat Son 80 11 

on some worthless song " 100 3 

Worthy — seem death-worthy in thy 

brother R L 635 

Is worthy blame " 1257 

thus begins: 'Thou worthy lord " 1803 

To show me worthy Son 26 12 

Worthy perusal stand " 38 6 

Most worthy comfort " 48 6 

can nothing worthy prove " 72 4 

More worthy I to be " 150 14 

rule things worthy blame P P 19 3 

Wot— God wot, it was defect R L 1345 

Would — as she would be thrust VA 41 

Would in thy palm dissolve " 144 

and now she fain would speak " 221 

She would, he will not " 226 

would surpass the life " 289 

Would thou wert as I am " 369 

I would assure thee " 371 

bane would cure thee " 372 

0, would thou hadst not " 428 

my ears would love " 433 

thy outward jjarts would move " 435 

Yet would my love to thee be " 442 

Would they not wish " 447 

Would root those beauties " 636 

would breed a scarcity " 753 

And would say after her " 852 

would he put his bonnet on " 1087 

the gaudy sun would peep " 1088 

The wind would blow it off " 1089 

then would Adonis weep " 1090 

They both would strive " 1092 

he would not fear him " 1094 

tiger would be tame " 1096 

wolf would leave his prey " 1097 

That some would sing " 1102 

Would bring him mulberries " 1103 

beauty would blush for shame R L 54 

Yirtue would stain that o'er " 56 

that would let him go " 76 

Would with the sceptre straight 

be strucken " 217 

And they would stand " 347 

This guilt would seem " 635 

what he would lose again " 688 

And therefore would they still in 

darkness be " 752 

queen he would distain " 786 

Collatine would else have come to 

me " 916 

Would purchase thee a thousand " 963 

who so base would such an ofiice 

have " 1000 

in night would cloister'd be " 1085 

at that would do it good " 1117 

mine own would do me good " 1274 

She would request to know " 1283 



WOULD 



363 



WRINKLE 



Would— she .... not blot the letter E L 1322 

of Troy there would appear " 1382 

That one would swear " 1393 

It scem'd they would debate " 1421 

She would have said " ..... 1535 

would be drawu out too long " 1616 

as if her heart would break " 1716 

would make the world away Son 11 8 

would bear your living flowers " 16 7 

The age to come would say '' 17 7 
How would thy shadow's form 

form happy show "43 6 
How would, I say, mine eyes be 

blessed made " 43 9 
despiteof space, I would be brought " '14 3 

the place where he would be " 44 8 

thy picture's sight would bar " 46 3 

from these would I be gone " 66 13 
I in your sweet thoughts would be 

forgot " 71 7 

Unless you would devise " 72 5 

truth would willingly impart " 72 8 

others would give life " 83 12 

Because I would not dull you " 102 14 
antique pen would have express'd " 106 7 

outward form would show it " 108 14 

would by ill be cured " 118 12 

they would change their state " 128 9 

the thing she would have stay " 143 4 

And would corrupt my saint " 144 7 

needs would touch my breast " 153 10 

would not break from thence L C 34 

Ink would have seem'd " 54 

and often men would say " 106 

for him what he would say " 132 

she would the caged cloister fly " 249 

would she be immured " 251 

did win whom he would maim " 312 

he would exclaim " 313 

would not be so lover'd " 320 

Would yet again betray " 328 

And would corrupt my saint P P 2 7 

would not touch the bait " 4 11 

And would not take " 11 12 

the night would post too soon " 15 13 

Air, would I might triumph " 17 ' 10 
Thou for whom Jove would swear " 17 15 
One woman would another wed " 19 48 

Fie, fie, fie, now would she cry " 21 13 

Wouldst — wouldst hunt the boar VA 614 

wouldst thou one hour come backP L 965 

to store thou wouldst convert Son 14 12 
what a torment wouldst thou prove " 39 9 

If thou wouldst use " 96 12 

Wound— thy heart my wound VA 370 

licking of his wound " 915 

Upon the wide wound " 1052 

that his wound wept " 1054 

makes the wound seem three " 1064 

Bearing away the wound R L 731 

make the wound ache more " 1116 

that makes my wound " 1201 

Staring on Priam's wounds " 1448 

in Priam's painted wound " 1466 

gives unadvised wounds " 1488 

his wounds will not be sore " 1568 

to give this wound to me " 1722 

and through her wounds doth fly " 1728 

Do wounds help wounds " 1822 



Wound— That heals the wound Son 34 8 

For that deep wound " 133 2 

he saw more wounds than one P P 9 13 

Wound — with his hard hoof he 

wounds VA 267 

And never wound the heart " 1042 

That wounds my body RL 1185 

Wound his folly's show " 1810 

Wound me not with thine eye Son 139 3 

What needst thou wound " 139 7 

IVounded — How he in peace is ... . R L 831 

salve which wounded bosoms fits Son 120 12 

wounded fancies sent me L C 197 

deep-wounded with a boar P P 9 10 

was wounded with disdain " 16 11 

Wound'st— his princely name R L 599 

Wounding— heart's deep-sore ... . VA 432 

the wounding of a frown " 465 

Wounding itself to death R L 466 

crest-wounding private scar " 828 

Woven — And now his woven girths V A 266 

Wrack — pure blush and honour's 

wrack " 558 

guilty of thy honour's wrack R L 841 

and shun thy wrack " 966 

sovereign mistress over wrack Son 126 5 

Wrapp'd — . ... in repentant cold R L 48 

Wrapp'd and confounded " 456 

wrapp'd in with infamies " 636 

Wrath— Wrath, envy, treason, rape '' 909 

This load of wrath " 1474 

cold modesty, hot wrath L C 293 

Wreak'd — Be wreak'd on him VA 1004 

Wreath — and wreaths of victory R L 110 

Wreathed— Wreathed up in fatal 

folds VA 879 

Wreck — Wreck to the seaman " 454 

Time's ruin, beauty's wreck R L 1451 

Wreck'd — Or being wreck'd Son 80 11 

Wreckful — Against the siege " 65 6 

Wreck -threatening— . . . . heart R L 590 

Wresting — Now this ill-wresting 

world Sm 140 11 

Wretch— Mark the poor wretch VA 680 

the dew-bedabbled wretch " 703 

Poor wretches have remorse R L 269 

the wretch did know Son 50 7 

conquest of a wretch's knife " 74 11 

and vassal wretch to be " 141 12 

Wretched — and hateful days R L 161 

Such wretched hands such wretch- 
ed blood should spill " 999 

woes making, wretched I " 1136 

a wretched image bound " 1501 

and wretched arms across " 1662 

But wretched as he is " 1665 

Thy wretched wife mistook " 1826 

Wretched in this alone Son 91 13 

and me most wretched make " 91 14 

What wretched errors " 119 5 

and wretched minutes kill " 126 8 

Wretchedness— free that soul which 

wretchedness hath chained R L 900 

Wring — He wrings her nose VA 475 

Wringing — hurt my hand with .... " 421 

Wrinkle — one wrinkle in my brow " 139 

In the remorseless wrinkles R L 562 

chaps and wrinkles were disguised " 1452 

Despite of wrinkles Son 3 12 



WRINKLE 



364 



YET 



103 
134 

82 
26 



M'rinkle — With lines aad wrinkles Son 63 

The wrinkles which thy glass " 77 

and frowns and wrinkles strange " 93 

any wrinkle graven there " 100 

Nor give to necessary wrinkles " 108 

Wrinkled — wait on wrinkled age M L 

Wrinkled-old — foul or wrinkled-old VA 

Writ— having writ on death " 

Writ in the glassy margents R L 

what is writ in learned books 

writ in my testament 

and it will soon be writ 

sorrow writ uncertainly 

now is seal'd and on it writ 

what silent love hath writ Son 23 

The hand that writ it " 71 

what in you is writ " 84 

Is writ in moods " 93 

that I before have writ " 115 

I never writ, nor no man " 116 
Write — and she prepares to write R L 

If I could write the beauty Son 

let me, true in love, but truly write " 

that cannot write to thee 

Why write I still 

I always write of you 

when I of you do write 

But he that writes of you 

whilst other write good words 

by spirits taught to write 

If I no more can write 

but surety-like to write for me 
Writer — words which writers use 
Written — this written embassage 
Wrong — blaze fo*th her wrong V A 

the heart hath treble wrong 

hath done me double wrong 

hath done thee wrong 

hath done her beauty wrong R L 

What wrong, what shame 

to do her husband wrong 

swears he did her wrong 

that hath done him wrong 

And what wrong else 

to venge this wrong of mine 

Her wrongs to us 

despite thy wrong Son 

to bear love's wrong 

Those petty wrongs 

myself will bear all wrong 

should do it wrong 

to fear the worst of wrongs 

or changes right or wrong 

to justify the wrong 

do not love that wrong P P 
Wrong— To wrong the wronger R L 

1 will not wrong thy true affec- 
tion so 

Wronged— How Tarquin .... me 
' Thou wronged lord of Eome 

M'ronger — To wrong the wronger 

Wrongest — Thou his honour 

Wrongfully— perfection wrongfully 
disgraced Son 

Wrought — that she hath wrought V A 
impiety hath wrought R L 

Till Nature as she wrought Son 

of earth and water wrought " 

Wrought all my loss • P P 



4 

5 

8 

10 

11 

275 

133 

509 

102 

811 

1183 

1295 

1311 

1331 

13 

6 

9 

8 

1 

14 

1296 

5 

9 

7 

5 

9 

1 

7 

5 

5 

5 

7 

3 

3 

219 

329 

429 

1005 

80 

499 

1264 

1462 

1467 

1622 

1691 

1840 

13 

12 

1 

14 

11 

5 

8 

1 

13 
943 

1060 
819 

1818 
943 
599 



66 


7 




991 




341 


20 


10 


44 


11 


18 


14 



Te — thus I will excuse ye Son 42 5 

dear friend, and I assure ye " 111 13 

That's to ye sworn L C 180 

Yea— Yea, though I die RL 204 

Yea, the illiterate, that know not " 810 

without or yea or no " 1340 

my love, yea, take them all Son 40 1 

Tear — from the dangerous year V A 508 

with my unripe years " 524 

of his tender years " 1091 

And threescore year would make Son 11 8 

Thy beauty and thy years " 41 3 

in the long year set " 52 6 

spring and foison of the year " 53 9 

That time of year " 73 1 

the pleasure of the fleeting year " 97 2 

loves not to have years told " 138 12 

my years be past the best P P 1 6 

loves not to have years told " 1 12 

unripe years did want "49 

Yearly — spring doth yearly grow VA 141 

Yell— loud pursuers in their yell " 688 

Yellow — When .... leaves or none Son 73 2 

to yellow autumn turn'd " 104 5 

Yellowed — yellow'd with their age " 17 9 

Yelping — the timorous yelping of 

the hounds VA 881 

Yes — 0, yes it may " 939 

O, yes, dear friend P P 10 11 

Yet— And yet not cloy VA 19 

yet her fire must burn " 94 

Y'et hath he been " 101 

Yet was he servile " 112 

yet are they red " 116 

yet mayst thou well " 128 

and yet no footing seen " 148 

yet his proceedings teach thee " 406 

Y'et should I be " 438 

Y''et would my love " 442 

that ever yet betoken'd " 453 

yet complain on drouth " 544 

she feeds, yet never filleth " 548 

yet 'tis pluck'd " 574 

Y'et love breaks through " 576 

yet she is not loved " 610 

Yet from mine ear " 778 

And yet she hears " 867 

yet nought at all " 911 

Y'et sometimes falls " 981 

and yet too credulous " 986 

Yet pardon me, I felt " 998 

and never woman yet " 1007 

'And yet,' quoth she " 1070 

day should yet be light " 1134 

Y'et their ambition makes R L 68 

Doth yet in his fair welkin " 116 

Yet ever to obtain " 129 

yet he still pursues " 308 

on her yet unstained bed " 366 

yet, winking, there appears " 458 

that yet remains " 463 

Y'et strive I " 504 

Yet, foul night-waking cat " 554 

yet ere he go to bed " 776 

' Yet am I guilty " 841 

Y'et for thy honour " 842 

Y'et for the self-same purpose " 1047 

' Y'et die I will not " 1177 

Yet with the fault " 1279 



YET 



365 



YOU 



Tet — ^Yet save that labour 


RL 


1290 


And yet the duteous vassal 


" 


1360 


yet shoie'd content 




1503 


but yet defiled 




1545 


and yet not wise 




1550 


yet it seldom sleeps 


" 


1574 


in her poison'd closet yet endure 




1659 


Yet in the eddy 




1669 


yet let the traitor die 




1686 


that yet her sad task 




1699 


Yet sometime ' Tarquin 




1786 


Yet neither may possess 




1794 


yet canst not live 


San 4 


8 


Yet mortal looks adore ] 


7 


7 


And yet methinks I have 


" 14 


2 


maiden gardens, yet unset 


" 16 


6 


Though yet, heaven knows 


" 17 


3 


Yet do thy worst 


" 19 


13 


Yet eyes this cunning want 


" 24 


13 


Yet in these thoughts 


" 29 


9 


Yet him for this my love 


" 33 


13 


yet I have still the loss 


" 34 


10 


Yet doth it steal 


" 36 


8 


But yet be blamed 


" 40 


7 


And yet, love knows 


" 40 


11 


yet we must not be foes 


" 40 


14 


but yet thou mightst 


" 41 


9 


And yet it may be said 


" 42 


2 


And yet to times in hope 


" 60 


13 


was ever yet the fair 


" 70 


2 


Yet this thy praise 


" 70 


11 


Yet be most proud 


" 78 


9 


Yet what of thee 


" 79 


7 


eyes yet not created 


" 81 


10 


yet when they have devised 


" 82 


9 


for my sin you did impute 


" 83 


9 


and yet I know it not 


" 92 


14 


And yet this time 


" 97 


5 


Yet this abundant issue 


" 97 


9 


Yet nor the lays of birds 


" 98 


5 


Yet seem'd it winter still 


" 98 


13 


yet I none could see 


" 99 


14 


of ages yet to be 


" 101 


12 


which yet are green 


" 104 


8 


Ah, yet doth beauty 


" 104 


9 


Can yet the lease 


" 107 


3 


but yet, like prayers 


" 108 


5 


Yet then my judgement 


" 115 


3 


Yet fear her, thou minion 


" 126 


9 


Yet so they mourn 


" 127 


13 


yet none knows well 


" 129 


13 


yet well I know 


" 130 


9 


And yet, by heaven 


" 130 


13 


Yet, in good faith 


" 131 


5 


And yet thou wilt 


" 133 


13 


and yet am I not free 


" 134 


14 


yet receives rain still 


" 135 


9 


Yet what the best is 


" 137 


4 


Yet do not so 


" 139 


13 


yet, love, to tell me so 


" 140 


6 


yet not directly tell 


" 144 


10 


Yet this shall I ne'er know 


" 144 


13 


Yet who knows not 


" 151 


2 


which yet men prove 


" 153 


7 


Found yet moe letters 


LC 


47 


I might as yet have been 




75 


was yet upon his chin 




92 


Yet show'd his" visage 




96 


Yet, if men moved him 




101 



Yet— yet their purposed trim L C 118 

'Yet did I not " 143 

and yet do question make " 321 

Would yet again betray " 328 

yet not directly tell pp 2 10 

Yet not so wist.ly " g 12 

and yet, as glass is, brittle "73 

and yet as iron rusty "74 

Yet in the midst of all " 7 U 

yet she foil'd the framing " 7 15 

and yet she fell a-turning " 7 16 

and yet no cause I have " 10 7 

And yet thou left'st me more " 10 9 

Yet at my parting sweetly " 14 7 

Yet not for me " ig jg 

too young, nor yet unwed " 19 6 

Yet will she blush " 19 53 

Hearts remote, yet not asunder P T 29 

To themselves yet either neither " 43 

Yield— did honey passage yield VA 452 

And yields at last " 566 

captain once doth yield " 893 

captive vanquished doth yield P L 75 

portal yields him way " 309 

But if thou yield " 526 

Yield to my love " 668 

Yield to my hand " 121O 

they such odd action yield " 1433 

The earth can yield me Son 81 7 

to razed oblivion yield " 122 7 

But yield them up L C 221 

will yield at length P P 19 21 

the craggy mountains yields " 20 4 

Yielded— nor being desired yielded L C 149 

Yielding— caught the yielding ppey VA 547 

Which with a yielding latch R L 339 

and her for yielding so " 1036 

To accessary yieldings " 1658 

Yoke — yokes her silver doves VA 1190 

no bearing yoke they knew R L 409 

Unless thou yoke thy liking " 1633 

Yokinsf — her .... arms she throws VA 592 

Yore — what beauty was of yore Son 68 14 

You — I pray you hence VA 382 

'You hurt my hand " 421 

'if any love you owe me " 523 

" Good night," and so say you " 535 

If you will say so, you shall have 

a kiss " 536 

' you crush me ; let me go " 611 

You have no reason " 612 

' you will fall again " 769 

The kiss I gave you " 771 

all in vain you strive " 772 

like you worse and worse " 774 

' If love have lent you " 775 

' What have you urg'd " 787 

You do it for increase " 791 

ever strive to kiss you " 1082 

you need not fear " 1083 

The sun doth scorn you, and the 

wind doth hiss you " 10S4 

thoughts, before you blot R L 192 

be you mediators " 1020 

' You mocking birds,' quoth she " 1121 

be you mute and dumb " 1123 

There might you see " 1380 

You might behold " 1388 

you see grave Nestor stand " 1401 



YOU 



366 



YOUNG 



Ton — And swear I found you where 
you did jR L 

ere I name him, you fair lords " 

that you were yourself! but, love, 



you are 
you yourself here live 
you should prepare 
which you hold in lease 
then you were 
dear my love, you know 
You had a father 
Sets you most rich 
Time for love of you 
As he takes from you, I engraft 

you new 
do not you a mightier way 
Now stand you on the top 
Can make you live 
And you must live 
You should live twice 
must you see his skill 
keeps you as my chest 
Blessed are you 
whereof are you made 
shadows on you tend 
And you, but one 
imitated after you 
And you in Grecian tires 
you in every blessed shape 
grace you have some part 
you like none, none you 
And so of you 
But you shall shine 
Shall you pace forth 
You live in this 
till you require 
watch the clock for you 
When you have bid 
Where you may be 
Save, where you are how happy 

you make those 
Though you do any thing 
accusing you of injury 
Be w\iere you list 
That you yourself 
To what you will ; to you it doth 

belong 
Than you shall hear 
if you read this line 
for I love you so 
should make you woe 
you look upon this verse 
And mock you with me 
task you to recite 
that you should love 
For you in me 
Unless you would devise 
That you for love 
nor me nor you 
And so should you 
So are you to my thoughts 
And for the peace of you 
to be with you alone 
must from you be took 
I always write of you 
And you and love are still my 
when I of you do write 
Or you survive 
When you entombed 



Son 





1635 




1688 


13 


1 


13 


2 


13 


3 


13 


5 


13 


6 


13 


13 


13 


14 


15 


10 


15 


13 


15 


14 


16 


1 


16 


5 


16 


12 


10 


14 


17 


14 


24 


5 


52 


9 


52 


13 


53 


1 


53 


2 


53 


4 


53 


6 


53 


8 


53 


12 


53 


13 


53 


14 


54 


13 


55 


3 


55 


10 


65 


14 


57 


4 


57 


6 


57 


8 


57 


10 


57 


12 


57 


14 


58 


8 


58 


9 


58 


10 


58 


11 


71 


2 


71 


5 


71 


6 


71 


8 


71 


9 


71 


14 


72 


1 


72 


2 


72 


4 


72 


5 


72 


10 


72 


12 


72 


14 


75 


1 


75 


3 


75 


7 


75 


12 


76 


9 


76 


10 


80 


1 


81 


2 


81 


8 



You— You still shall live Son 81 13 

that you did painting need " 83 1 

you did exceed " 83 3 
That you yourself, being extant " 83 6 

worth in you doth grow " 83 8 

my sin you did impute " 83 9 

that you alone are you " 84 2 

But he that writes of you " 84 7 

That you are you " 84 8 

what in you is writ " 84 9 
You to your beauteous blessings " 84 13 

Hearing you praised " 85 9 

whose love to you " 85 11 

of all too precious you " 86 2 

From you have I been absent " 98 1 

Drawn after you, you pattern " 98 12 

and, you away " 98 13 

dull you with my song " 102 14 
your own glass shows you when 

you look in it " 103 14 

you never can be old " 104 1 

For as you were " 104 2 

Since first I saw you fresh " 104 8 

Ere you were born " 104 14 

as you master now " 106 8 

all you prefiguring " 106 10 

do you with Fortune chide " 111 1 

So you o'er-greea my bad " 112 4 

You are my all-the-world " 112 5 

You are so strongly " 112 18 

Since I left you " 113 1 

replete with you " 113 13 

being crown'd with you " 114 1 

I could not love you " 115 2 

' Now I love you best " 115 10 

that so fell sick of you " 118 14 

That you were once unkind "120 1 

For if you were " 120 5 

you've pass'd a hell of time " 120 6 

soon to you, as you to me " 120 11 

saying ' not you " 145 14 

though in me you behold L C 71 

offences that abroad you see " 183 

That is to you, my origin " 222 

I their altar, you enpatron me " 224 

What me your minister, for you 

obeys " 229 

Works under you " 280 

IIow mighty then you are " 253 

and you o'er rae being strong " 257 

their sighs to you extend " 276 

that you make 'gainst mine " 277 

you had not had it then P P 19 24 

Have you not heard it said " 19 41 

Toung — young, and so unkind VA 187 

lusty, young, and proud " 260 

and burdened being young " 419 

love makes young men thrall " 837 

Make the young old " 1152 

to be master'd by his young R L 863 

the young possess their hive " 1769 

in my verse ever live young Son 19 14 

the ambush of young days " 70 9 
thinking that she thinks me young " 138 5 

Love is too young to know " 151 1 

Of young, of old L C 128 

Who, young and simple " 320 

that she thinks me young P P 1 5 

says my love that she is young "19 



YOUNG 



867 



YOURSELF 



Young— With young Adonis P P 

Venus, with young Adonis 
O, my love, my love is young 
Neither too young nor yet 
the world and love were young 
Toungliiigr— She told the youngling 
Youngly — blood which youngly thou 

bestow'st Son 

Youngster — a .... proud and wild " 
Your— And 'tis your fault V A . 

Eemove your siege " . 
your Vows, your feigned tears, 

your flattery " . 

your idle over-handled theme " . 

Your treatise makes me " 

more moving than your own " . 

but your device in love " 

to your wanton talk " 
With your uueleanness R L 

your tunes entomb " 
Within your hollow-swelling fea- 

ther'd breasts " 

Relish your nimble notes " 

if your maid may be so bold " 

to know your heaviness " 

plight your honourable faiths " 
And your sweet semblance Son 
When your sweet issue your sweet 

form should bear " 

let your son say so " 

change your day of youth " 

fortify yourself in your decay " 

bear your living flowers " 

your painted counterfeit " 

by your own sweet skill " 

your most high deserts " 
Which hides your life and shows 

not half your parts " 

the beauty of your eyes " 

number all your graces " 

And your true rights " 

To find where your true image "• 

What is your substance " 

shadow of your beauty show " 

as your bounty doth appear " 

by verse distills your truth " 

record of your memory " 

your praise shall still find room " 

Being your slave " 

and times of your desire " 

bid your servant once adieu " 

or your affairs suppose " 

love that in your will " 

made me first your slave " 

your times of pleasure " 

Or at your hand " 
Being your vassal, bound to stay 

your leisure " 

being at your beck " 

absence of your liberty " 

your charter is so strong " 

may privilege your time " 

Not blame your pleasure " 

Show me your image " 

wonder of your frame " 

That I in your sweet thought " 

But let your love " 

look into your moan " 

O, lest your true love " 



11 3 

9 4 

.... 381 

.... 423 



.... 425 

.... 770 

.... 774 

.... 776 

.... 7S9 

.... 809 

.... 193 

.... 1121 

.... 1122 

.... 1126 

.... 1282 

.... 1283 

.... 1690 

13 4 



13 


8 


13 


14 


15 


12 


16 


3 


16 


7 


16 


8 


16 


14 


17 


2 


17 


4 


17 


5 


17 


6 


17 


11 


24 


6 


53 


1 


53 


10 


53 


11 


54 


14 


55 


8 


55 


10 


57 


1 


57 


2 


57 


8 


57 


10 


57 


13 


58 


1 


58 


2 


58 


3 


58 


4 


58 


5 


58 


6 


58 


9 


58 


10 


58 


14 


59 


7 


59 


10 


71 


7 


71 


12 


71 


13 


72 


9 



Your— feasting on your sight Son 75 9 
doth use your name " 80 2 
speaking of your fame " 80 4 
But since your worth " 80 5 
On your broad main " 80 8 
Your shallowest help " 80 9 
upon your soundless deep " 80 10 
your epitaph to make " 81 1 
From hence your memory " 81 3 
Your name from hence " 81 5 
Your monument shall be " 81 9 
tongues to be your being shall re- 
hearse " 81 11 
therefore to your fair no painting 

set " 83 2 
I slept in your report " 85 5 
in one of your fair eyes " 83 13 
Then both your poets " 83 14 
where your equal grew " 84 4 
you to your beauteous blessings " 84 13 
makes your praises worse " 84 14 
While comments of your praise " 85 2 
But when your countenance " 86 13 
As with your shadow " 98 14 
Look in your glass " 103 6 
Than of your graces and your gifts " 103 12 
Your own glass shows you " 103 14 
when first your eye I eyed " 104 2 
Such seems your beauty " 104 3 
So your sweet hue " 104 11 
your worth to sing - " 106 12 
Even that your pity " 111 14 
Your love and pity "112 1 
and praises from your tongue " 112 6 
shapes them to your feature " 113 12 
And that your love " 114 4 
as your sweet self resemble "114 6 
your great deserts repay " 117 2 
your dearest love to call " 117 3 
your own dear-purchased right " 117 6 
farthest from your sight "117 8 
level of your frown " 117 11 
in your waken'd hate " 117 12 
and virtue of your love " 117 14 
bring full your ne'er-cloying sweet- 
ness "118 5 
I suflfer'd iu your crime " 120 8 
that your trespass " 120 13 

Let it not tell your judgement L C 73 

must your oblations be " 223 

to your own command " 227 

What me your luinister " 229 

and to your audit comes " 230 

I pour your ocean all among " 256 

Must for your victory " 258 

to physic your cold breast " 259 

Yours — No longer yours than you 

yourself Son 13 2 

were some child of yours alive " 17 13 

As I by yours " 120 6 
Mine ransoms yours, and yours 

must ransom me " 120 14 
'0, then, advance of yours that 

phraseless hand L C 225 

Yourself—Busy yourselves in skill- 
contending schools R L 1018 

O, that you were yourself Son 13 1 
No longer yours than you your- 
self here live "13 2 



YOURSELF 



868 



ZEALOUS 



Yourself— Yourself again, after your- 
self s decease Son 13 7 
And fortify yourself " 16 3 
Can make you live yourself " 16 12 
To give away yourself keeps your- 
self still ' " 16 13 
judgement that yourself arise " 55 13 
That you yourself may privilege " 58 10 
Yourself to pardon " 68 12 
That you yourself, being extant " 83 6 

Youth— his youth's fair fee VA 393 

My youth with his " 1120 

This blur to youth R L 222 

My part is youth " '278 

Eater of youth, false slave " 927 

In youth, quick bearing " 1389 

Thy yofith's proud livery Son 2 3 
Resembling strong youth "76 

when thou from youth convertest " 11 4 

Sets you most rich in youth " 15 10 

change your day of youth " 18 12 

So long as youth and thou " 22 2 
To see his active child do deeds of 

youth " 37 2 

and thy straying youth " 41 10 

the flourish set on youth " 60 9 

on the ashes of his youth " 73 10 

Some say, thy fault is youth " 96 1 

thy grace is youth and gentle sport " 96 2 

a spirit of youth in every thing " 98 3 



Youth— These blenches gave my 

heart another youth Smi 110 7 

scythed all that youth begun L C 12 

Nor youth all quit " 13 

with his authorized youth " 104 

art in youth and youth in art " 145 

of my suffering youth " 178 

did I see a fair sweet youth P P 9 9 

Crabbed age and youth " 12 1 

Youth is full of pleasance " 12 2 

Youth like summer morn " 12 3 

Youth like summer brave " 12 4 

Youth is full of sport " 12 5 

Youth is nimble " 12 6 

Youth is hot and bold " 12 7 

Youth is wild " 12 8 

youth, I do adore thee " 12 9 

Vow, alack ! for youth unmeet " 17 13 

Youth so apt to pluck a sweet " 17 14 

Yoiith — beauteous and lovely youth Son 54 13 
she might think me some untu- 

tor'd youth " 138 3 
she might think me some untu- 

tor'd youth P P 1 3 

Youtliful— To see their sons P L 1432 

Vaunt in their youthful sap Son 15 7 

when his youthful morn " 63 4 

A youthful suit, — it was L C 79 

Zealous — Intend a . . . . pilgrimage Son 27 6 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



Even as the sun witli purple-colour'd face 
Had ta'en his last leave of the weeping morn, 
Rose-cheek'd Adonis hied him to the chase ; 
Hvmting he loved, but love he laugh'd to scorn ; 
Sick-thoughted Venus makes amain unto him, 5 
And like a bold-faced suitor 'gins to woo him. 

' Thrice fairer than myself,' thus shfl began, 
' The field's chief flower, sweet-tfoove compare, 
Stain to all nymphs, more lovely than a man. 
More white and red than doves or roses are ; 10 

Nature that made thee, with herself at strife, 
, Saith that the world hath ending with thy life. 

' Vouchsafe, thou wonder, to alight thy steed. 
And rein his proud head to the saddle-bow ; 
If thou wilt deign this favour, for thy meed 15 
A thousand honey secrets shalt thou know ; 
Here come and sit, where never serpent hisses, 
And, being set, I'll smother thee with kisses ; 

' And yet not cloy thy lips with loathed satiety. 
But rather famish them amid their plenty, 20 
Making them red and pale with fresh variety ; 
Ten kisses short as one, one long as twenty ; 
A summer's day will seem an hour but short. 
Being wasted in such time-beguiling sport.' 

"With this she seizeth on his sweating palm, 25 
The precedent of pith and livelihood. 
And, trembling in her passion, calls it balm. 
Earth's sovereign salve to do a goddess good ; 
Being so enraged, desire doth lend her force 
Courageously to pluck him from his horse. 30 

Over one arm the lusty courser's rein, 
I Under her other was the tender boy, 

Who blush'd and pouted in a dull disdain, 

With leaden appetite, unapt to toy ; 
She red and hot as coals of glowing fire, 35 
He red for shame, but frosty in desire. 

The studded bridle on a ragged bough 
Nimbly she fastens, — 0, how quick is love ! — 
The steed is stalled up, and even now 
To tie the rider she begins to prove ; 40 

Backward she push'd him, as she would be 
thrust. 

And govern'd him in strength, though not in lust. 

So, soon was she along as he was down, 
Each leaning on their ellx)ws and their hips : 
Now doth she stroke his cheek, now doth he 
frown, 45 

And 'gins to chide, but soon she stops his lips, 
24 



And kissing speaks, with lustful language 

broken, 
' If thou wilt chide, thy lips shall never open.' 

He burns with bashful shame; she with her tears 
Doth quench the maiden burning of his cheeks ; 50 
Then with her windy sighs and golden hairs 
To fan and blow them dry again she seeks ; 

He saith she is immodest, blames her miss ; 

What follows more she murders with a kiss. 

Even as an empty eagle, sharp by fast, 55 

Tires with her beak on feathers, flesh, and bone. 
Shaking her wings, devouring all in haste, 
Till either gorge be stuflF'd or prey be gone ; 
Even so she kiss'd his brow, his cheek, his chin, 
And where she ends she doth anew begin. 60 

Forced to content, but never to obey, 
Panting he lies and breatheth in her face ; 
She feedeth on the steam as on a prey, 
And calls it heavenly moisture, air of grace ; 64 
Wishing her cheeks were gardens full of flowers, 
So they were dew'd with such distilling showers. 

Look, how a bird lies tangled in a net. 

So fasten'd in her arms Adonis lies ; 

Pure shame and awed resistance made him fret, 

Which bred more beauty in his angry eyes ; 70 
Eain added to a river that is rank 
Perforce will force it overflow the bank. 

Still she entreats, and prettily entreats, 
For to a pretty ear she tunes her tale ; 
Still is he sullen, still he lours and frets,' 75 

'Twixt crimson shame and anger ashy-pale ; 
Being red, she loves him best ; and being white. 
Her best is better'd with a more delight. 

Look how he can, she cannot choose but love ; 
And by her fair immortal hand she swears 80 
From his soft bosom never to remove. 
Till he take truce with her contending tears. 

Which long have rain'd, making her cheeks all 
wet; 

And one sweet kiss shall pay this countless debt. 

Upon this promise did he raise his chin, 85 

Like a dive-dapper peering through a wave, 
"Who, being look'd on, ducks as quickly in ; 
So oflers he to give what she did crave ; 
But when her lips were ready for his pay. 
He winks, and turns his lips another way. 90 

Never did passenger in summer's heat 
More thirst for drink than she for this good turn. 
369 



370 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



[Line 93-204. 



Her help she sees, but help she cannot get ; 

She bathes in water, yet her fire must burn ; 
' O, pity,' 'gan she cry, ' flint-hearted boy ! 95 
'Tis but a kiss I beg ; why art thou coy ? 

' I have been woo'd, as I entreat thee now, 
Even by the stern and direful god of war, 
Whose sinewy neck in battle ne'er did bow, 
Who conquers where he comes in every jar ; 100 
Yet hath he been my captive and my slave. 
And begg'd for that which thou unask'd shalt 
have. 

' Over my altars hath he hung his lance, 
His batter'd shield, his uncontrolled crest. 
And for my sake hath learn'd to sport and dance. 
To toy, to wanton, dally, smile and jest; 106 

Scorning his churlish drum and ensign red. 
Making my arms his field, his tent my bed. 

' Thus he that overruled I oversway'd. 

Leading him prisoner in a red-rose chain ; 110 

Strong -tempered steel his stronger strength 

obey'd, 
Yet was he servile to my coy disdain. 
O, be not proud, nor brag not of thy might. 
For mastering her that foil'd the god of fight ! 

' Touch but my lips with those fair lips of thine, — 
Though mine be not so fair, yet are they red,— 116 
The kiss shall be thine own as well as mine ; 
What see'st thou in the ground ? hold up thy head ; 

Look in mine eyeballs, there thy beauty lies ; 

Then why not lips on lips, since eyes in eyes? 120 

'Art thou ashamed to kiss? then wink again, 

And I will wink ; so shall the day seem night ; 

Love keeps his revels where there are but twain ; 

Be bold to play, our sport is not in sight ; 
These blue-vein'd violets whereon we lean 125 
Never can blab, nor know not what we mean. 

'The tender spring upon thy tempting lip 

Shews thee unripe ; yet mayst thou well be tasted ; 

Make use of time, let not advantage slip ; 

Beauty within itself should not be wasted ; 130 
Fair flowers that are not gather'd in their prime 
Eot and consume themselves in little time. 

' Were I hard-favour'd, foul, or wrinkled-old. 
Ill-nurtured, crooked, churlish, harsh in voice, 
O'erworn, despised, rheumatic and cold, 135 

Thick-sighted, barren, lean, and lacking juice. 

Then mightst thou pause, for then I were not 
for thee ; 

But having no defects, why dost abhor me? 

' Thou canst not see one wrinkle in my brow ; 
Mine eyes are grey, and bright, and quick in 
turning ; 140 

My beauty as the spring doth yearly grow, 
My flesh is soft and plump, my marrow burning ; 
My smooth, moist hand, were it with thy hand 

felt. 
Would in thy palm dissolve, or seem to melt. 

'Bid me discourse, I will enchant thine ear, 145 
Or, like a fairy, trip upon the green. 
Or, like a nymph with long dishevell'd hair, 
Dance on the sands, and yet no footing seen ; 



Love is a spirit all compact of fire, 

Not gross to sink, but light, and will aspire. 150 

' Witness this primrose bank whereon I lie ; 
These forceless flowers like sturdy trees support 

me; 
Two strengthless doves will draw me through the 

sky, 
From morn till night, even where I list to sport me ; 
Is love so light, sweet boy, and may it be 155 
That thou shouldst think it heavy unto thee ? 

' Is thine own heart to thine own face affected ? 

Can thy right hand seize love upon thy left ? 

Then woo thyself, be of thyself rejected. 

Steal thine own freedom, and complain on theft. 
Narcissus so himself himself forsook, 161 

And died to kiss his shadow in the brook. 

' Torches are made to light, jewels to wear, 
Dainties to taste, fresh beauty for the use, 164 
Herbs for their smell, and sappy plants to bear ; 
Things growing to themselves are growth's abuse ; 

Seeds spring from seeds and beauty breedeth 
beauty ; 

Thou wast begot ; to get it is thy duty. 

' Upon the earth's increase why shouldst thou feed,. 
Unless the earth with thy increase be fed? 170 
By law of nature thou art bound to breed, 
That thine may live when thou thyself art dead; 
And so, in spite of death, thou dost survive, 
In that thy likeness still is left alive.' 

By this, the love-sick queen began to sweat, 175 
For, where they lay, the shadow had forsook them, 
And Titan, tired in the mid-day heat. 
With burning eye did hotly overlook them, 
Wishing Adonis had his team to guide, 
So he were like him and by Venus' side. 180 

And now Adonis, with a lazy spright. 

And with a heavy, dark, disliking eye, 

His louring brows o'erwhelming his fair sight. 

Like misty vapours when they blot the sky, 184 

Souring his cheeks, cries ' Fie, no more of love! 

The sun doth burn my face ; I must remove.' 

' Ay me,' quoth Venus, ' yoiing, and so unkind ! 
What bare excuses makest thou to be gone ! 
I'll sigh celestial breath, whose gentle wind 
Shall cool the heat of this descending sun ; 190 ' 

I'll make a shadow for thee of my hairs ; 

If they burn too, I'll quench them with my tears. 

' The sun that shines from heaven shines but warm. 
And, lo, I lie between that sun and thee : 
The heat I have from thence doth little harm, 195 
Thine eye darts forth the fire that burneth me ; 
And were I not immortal, life were done 
Between this heavenly and earthly sun. 

'Art thou obdurate, flinty, hard as steel? 

Nay, more than flint, for stone at rain relenteth; 

Art thou a woman's son, and canst not feel 201 

What 'tis to love? how want of love tormenteth? 
0, had thy mother borne so hard a mind. 
She had not brought forth thee, but died unkind. 



Line 205-318.] 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



371 



' What am I, that thou shouldst contemn me this? 

Or what great danger dwells upon my suit? 206 

What were thy lips the worse for one poor kiss? 

Speak, fair ; but speak fair words, or else be mute ; 
Give me one kiss, I'll give it thee again, 
And one for interest, if thou wilt have twain. 210 

' Fie, lifeless picture, cold and senseless stone. 
Well-painted idol, image dull and dead, 
Statue contenting but the ey« alone. 
Thing like a man, but of no woman bred ! 

Thou art no man, though of a man's com- 
plexion, 215 

For men will kiss even by their own direction.' 

This said, impatience chokes her pleading tongue. 
And swelling passion doth provoke a pause ; 
Eed cheeks and fiery eyes blaze forth her wrong ; 
Being judge in love, she cannot right her cause; 

And now she weeps, and now she fain would 
speak, 221 

And now her sobs do her intendments break. 

Sometimes she shakes her head, and then his hand. 
Now gazeth she on him, now on the ground ; 
Sometimes her arms infold him like a band ; 225 
She would, he will not in her arms be bound ; 
And when from thence he struggles to be gone. 
She locks her lily fingers one in one. 

' Fondling,' she saith, ' since I have hemm'd thee 
here 

Within the circuit of tliis ivory pale, 230 

I'll be a park, and thou shalt be my deer ; 

Feed where thou wilt, on mountain or in dale ; 
Graze on my lips, and if those hills be dry. 
Stray lower, where the pleasant fountains lie. 

' Within this limit is relief enough, 235 

Sweet bottom-grass and high delightful plain, 
Bound rising hillocks, brakes obscure and rough, 
To shelter thee from tempest and from rain ; 

Then be my deer, since I am such a park ; 

No dog shall rouse thee, though a thousand 
bark.' 240 

At this Adonis smiles as in disdain, 
That in each cheek appears a pretty dimple ; 
Love made those hollows, if himself were slain, 
He might be buried in a tomb so simple ; 
Foreknowing well, if there he came to He, 245 
Why, there Love lived, and there he could not 
die. 

These lovely caves, these round enchanting pits, 
Open'd their mouths to swallow Venus' liking. 
Being mad before, how doth she now for wits? 249 
Struck dead at first, what needs a second striking ? 
Poor queen of love, in thine own law forlorn, 
To love a cheek that smiles at thee in scorn ! 

Now which way shall she turn ? what shall she say ? 

Her words are done, her woes the more increasing ; 

The time is spent, her object will away, 255 

And from her twining arms doth urge releasing. 
' Pity,' she cries, ' some favour, some remorse !' 
Away he springs, and hasteth to his horse. 

But, lo, from forth a copse that neighbours by, 
A breeding jennet, lusty, young, and proud, 260 
Adonis' trampling courser doth espy. 
And forth she rushes, snorts and neighs aloud ; 



The strong-neck'd steed, being tied unto a tree, 
Breaketh his rein and to her straight goes he. 

Imperiously he leaps, he neighs, he bounds, 265 
And now his woven girths he breaks asunder ; 
The bearing earth with his hard hoof he wounds. 
Whose hollow womb resounds like heaven's thun- 
der; 
The iron bit he crush eth 'tween his teeth. 
Controlling what he was controlled with. 270 

His ears up-prick'd ; his braided hanging mane 
Upon his compass'd crest now stand on end ; 
His nostrils drink the air, and forth again. 
As from a furnace, vapours doth he send ; 
His eye, which scornfully glisters like fire, 275 
Shows his hot courage and his high desire. 

Sometime he trots, as if he told the steps. 
With gentle majesty and modest pride ; 
Anon he rears upright, curvets and leaps. 
As who should say 'Lo, thus my strength is tried ; 
And this I do to captivate the eye 281 

Of the fair breeder that is standing by.' 

What recketh he his rider's angry stir. 
His flattering ' Holla ' or his ' Stand, I say ' ? 
What cares he now for curb or pricking spur? 285 
For rich caparisons or trapping gay ? 
He sees his love, and nothing else he sees. 
For nothing else with his proud sight agrees. 

Look, when a painter would surpass the life, 
In limning out a well-proportion'd steed, 290 
His art with nature's workmansliip at strife, 
As if the dead the living should exceed ; 
So did this horse excel a common one 
In shape, in courage, colour, pace, and bone. 

Eound-hoof'd, short-jointed, fetlocks shag and 

long, 295 

Broad breast, full eye, small head and nostril wide. 

High crest, short ears, straight legs and passing 

strong. 
Thin mane, thick tail, broad buttock, tender hide ; 
Look, what a horse should have he did not lack, 
Save a proud rider on so proud a back. 300 

Sometime he scuds far off, and there he stares ; 
Anon he starts at stirring of a feather ; 
To bid the wind a base he now prepares, 
And whe'r he run or fly they know not whether ; 
For through his mane and tail the high wind 
sings, 305 

Fanning the hairs, who wave like feather'd 
wings. 

He looks upon his love and neighs unto her; 
She answers him, as if she knew his mind ; 303 
Being proud, as females are, to see him woo her, 
She puts on outward strangeness, seems unkind. 
Spurns at his love and scorns the heat he feels. 
Beating his kind embracements with her heels. 

Then, like a melancholy malcontent. 
He vails his tail, that, like a falling plume. 
Cool shadow to his melting buttock lent ; 315 
He stamps, and bites the poor flies in his fume. 
His love, perceiving how he is enraged. 
Grew kinder, and his fury was assuaged. 



372 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



[Line 319-430- 



His testy master goeth about to take him ; 
When, lo, the unback'd breeder, full of fear, 320 
Jealous of catching, swiftly doth forsake him, 
With her the horse, and left Adonis there ; 
As they were mad, unto the wood they hie them. 
Out-stripping crows that strive to over-fly them. 

All swoln with chafing, down Adonis sits, 325 
Banning his boisterous and unruly beast; 
And now the happy season once more fits. 
That love-sick Love by pleading may be blest ; 
For lovers say the heart hath treble wrong 
When it is barr'd the aidance of the tongue. 330 

An oven that is stopp'd, or river stay'd, 
Burneth more hotly, swelleth with more rage ; 
So of concealed sorrow may be said: 
Free vent of words love's fire doth assuage ; 
But when the heart's attorney once is mute, 3;55 
The client breaks, as desperate in his suit. 

He sees her coming, and begins to glow, 
Even as a dying coal revives with wind, 
And with his bonnet hides his angry brow. 
Looks on the dull earth with disturbed mind; 340 
Taking no notice that she is so nigh. 
For all askance he holds her ioi his eye. 

O, what a sight it was, wistly to view 
How she came stealing to the wayward boy ! 
To note the fighting conflict of her hue, 345 

How white and red each other did destroy ! 
But now her cheek was pale, and by and by 
It flash'd forth fire, as lightning from the sky. 

Now was she just before him as he sat. 
And like a lowly lover down she kneels ; 350 

With one fair hand she heaveth up his hat. 
Her other tender hand his fair cheek feels ; 

His tenderer cheek receives her soft hand's 
print, 

As apt as new-fall'n snow takes any dint. 

0, what a war of looks was then between them ! 355 

Her eyes petitioners to his eyes suing ; 

His eyes saw her eyes as they bad not seen them ! 

Her eyes woo'd still, his eyes disdain'd the wooing ; 

And all this dumb play had his acts made plain 

With tears, which chorus-like her eyes did 

rain. 360 

Full gently now she takes him by the hand, 

A lily prison'd in a gaol of snow, 

Or ivory in an alabaster band ; 

So white a friend engirts so white a foe ; 
This beauteous combat, wilful and unwilling, 365 
Show'd like two silver doves that sit a^billing. 

Once more the engine of her thoughts began : 
' O fairest mover on this mortal round. 
Would thou wert as I am, and I a man, 369 

My heart all whole as thine, thy heart my wound ; 
For one sweet look thy help I would assure thee, 
Though nothing but my body's bane would cure 
thee.' 

'Give me my hand,' saith he; 'why dost thou feel 

it?' 
'Give me my heart,' saith she, 'and thou shalt 

have it ; 



O, give it me, lest thy hard heart do steel it, 375 

And being steel'd, soft sighs can never grave it ; 

Then love's deep groans I never shall regard. 

Because Adonis' heart hath made mine hard.' 

' For shame,' he cries, ' let go, and let me go ; 

My day's delight is past, my horse is gone, 380 

And 'tis your fault I am bereft him so ; 

I pray you hence, and leave me here alone ; 
For all my mind, my thought, my busy care, 
Is how to get my palfrey from the mare.' 

Thus she replies : ' Thy palfrey, as he should, 385 
Welcomes the warm approach of sweet desire ; 
Affection is a coal that must be cool'd ; 
Else, suffered, it will set the heart on fire ; 388 

The sea hath bounds, but deep desire hath none ; 

Therefore no marvel though thy horse be gone. 

' How like a jade he stood, tied to the tree, 
Servilely master'd with a leathern rein ! 
But when he saw his love, his youth's fair fee. 
He held such petty bondage in disdain ; 394 

Throwing the base thong from his bending crest, 
Enfranchising his mouth, his back, his breast. 

' Who sees his true-love in her naked bed. 
Teaching the sheets a whiter hue than white, 
But, w^hen his glutton eye so full hath fed, 
His other agents aim at like delight? 400 

Who is so faint, that dares not be so bold 
To touch the fire, the weather being cold ? 

' Let me excuse thy courser, gentle boy ; 
And learn of him, I heartily beseech thee. 
To take advantage on presented joy ; 405 

Though I were dumb, yet his proceedings teach 
thee ; 
O, learn to love ; the lesson is but plain, 
And once made perfect, never lost again.' 

' I know not love,' quoth he, ' nor will not know it. 
Unless it be a boar, and then I chase it ; 410 

'Tis much to borrow, and I will not owe it; 
My love to love is love but to disgrace it ; 
For I have heard it is a life in death. 
That laughs, and weeps, and all but with a 
breath. 

' Who wears a garment shapeless and unfinish'd ? 
Who plucks the bud before one leaf put forth? 416 
If springing things be any jot diminish'd. 
They wither in their prime, prove nothing worth ; 
The colt that's back'd and burden'd being young 
Loseth his pride, and never waxeth strong. 420 

' You hurt my hand with wringing ; let us part, 
And leave this idle theme, this bootless chat ; 
Remove your siege from my unyielding heart; 
To love's alarms it will not ope the gate ; 

Dismiss your vows, your feigned tears, your 
flattei-y ; 425 

For where a heart is hard they make no battery.' 

' What ! canst thou talk ?' quoth she, ' hast thou a 

tongue ? 
O, would thou hadst not, or I had no hearing ! 
Thy mermaid's voice hath done me double wrong ; 
I had my load before, now press'd with bearing ; 430 



LINE43I-544-] 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



37^ 



Melodious discord, heavenly tune harsh-sound- 

Ear's deep-sweet music, and heart's deep-sore 
wounding. 

' Had I no eyes but ears, my ears would love 

That inward beauty and invisible ; 

Or were I deaf, thy outward parts would move 435 

Each part in me that were but sensible ; 
Thougli neither eyes nor ears, to hear nor see, 
Yet should I be in love by touching thee. 

* Say, that the sense of feeling were bereft me. 
And that I could not see, nor hear, nor touch, 440 
And nothing but the very smell were left me, 
Yet would my love to thee be still as much ; 
For from the stillitory of thy face excelling 
Comes breath perfumed, that breedeth love by 
smelling. 

'But, O, what banquet wertthou to the taste, 445 
Being nurse and feeder of the other four ! 
Would they not wish the feast might ever last, 
And bid Suspicion double-lock the door. 
Lest Jealousy, that sour unwelcome guest. 
Should by his stealing in disturb the feast?' 450 

Once more the ruby-colour'd portal open'd, 
Which to his speech did honey passage yield ; 
Like a red morn that ever yet betoken'd 
Wreck to the seaman, tempest to the field, 
Sorrow to shepherds, woe unto the birds, 455 
Gusts and foul flaws to herdmen and to herds. 

This ill presage advisedly she marketh ; 
Even as the wind is hush'd before it raineth, 
Or as the wolf doth grin before he barketh. 
Or as the berry breaks before it staineth, 460 
Or like the deadly bullet of a gun. 
His meaning struck her ere his words begun. 

And at his look she flatly falleth down. 
For looks kill love, and love by looks reviveth ; 
A smile recures the wounding of a frown ; 465 
But blessed bankrupt, that by love so thriveth ! 
The silly boy, believing she is dead. 
Claps her pale cheek, till clapping makes it red; 

And all amazed brake oft' his late intent, 
For sharply he did think to reprehend her, 470 
Which cunning love did wittily prevent ; 
Fair fall the wit that can so well defend her ! 
For on the grass she lies as she were slain, 
Till his breath breatheth life in her again. 

He wrings her nose, he strikes her on the cheeks. 
He bends her fingers, holds her pulses hard, 476 
He chafes her lips ; a thousand ways he seeks 
To mend the hurt that his unkindness marr'd ; 
He kisses her ; and she, by her good will. 
Will never rise, so he will kiss her still. 480 

The night of sorrow now is turn'd to day ; 
Her two blue windows faintly she up-heaveth, 
Like the fair sun, when in his fresh array 
He cheers the morn, and all the earth relieveth ; 
And as the bright sun glorifies the sky, 485 
So is her face illumined with her eye ; 



Whose beams upon his hairless face are fix'd. 
As if from thence they borrow'd all their shine. 
Were never four such lamps together mix'd. 
Had not his clouded with his brow's repine; 

But hers, which through the crystal tears gave 
light, 491 

Shone like the moon in water seen by night. 

' 0, where am I?' quoth she; 'in earth or heaven. 
Or in the ocean drench'd, or in the fire? 
What hour is this? or morn or weary even? 495 
Do I delight to die, or life desire ? 

But now I lived, and life was death's annoy ; 

But now I died, and death was lively joy. 

' 0, thou didst kill me ; kill me once again ; 499 
Thy eyes' shrewd tutor, that hard heart of thine. 
Hath taught them scornful tricks, and such dis- 
dain, 
That they have murder'd this poor heart of mine ; 
And these mine eyes, true leaders to their queen, 
But for thy piteous lips no more had seen. 

' Long may they kiss each other, for this cure ! 505 
0, never let their crimson liveries wear ! 
And as they last, their verdure still endure, 
To drive infection from the dangerous year ! 
That the star-gazers, having writ on death, 509 
May say, the plague is banish'd by thy breath. 

' Pure lips, sweet seals in my soft lips imprinted. 
What bargains may I make, still to be sealing? 
To sell myself I can be well contented. 
So thou wilt buy, and pay, and use good dealing; 
Which purchase if thou make, for fear of slips 
Set thy seal-manual on my wax-red lips. 516 

' A thousand kisses buys my heart from me ; 
And pay them at thy leisure, one by one. 
What is ten hundred touches unto thee? 
Are they not quickly told and quickly gone? 520 

Say, for non-payment that the debt should 
double. 

Is twenty hundred kisses such a trouble ?' 

' Fair queen,' quoth he, ' if any love you owe me, 
Measure my strangeness with my unripe years ; 
Before I know myself, seek not to know me ; 525 
No fisher but the ungrown fry forbears ; 
The mellow plum doth fall, the green sticks fast. 
Or being early pluck'd is sour to taste. 

'Look, the world's comforter, with weary gait. 
His day's hot task hath ended in tlie west ; 530 
The owl, night's herald, shrieks, — 'tis very late ; 
The sheep are gone to fold, birds to their nest; 

And coal-black clouds that shadow heaven's 
light 

Do summon us to part, and bid good-night. 

'Now let me say "Good-night," and so say you; 
If you will say so, you shall have a kiss.' 536 

' Good -night,' quoth she ; and, ere he says 'Adieu,' 
The honey fee of parting tender'd is ; 
Her arms do lend his neck a sweet embrace ; 53E 
Incorporate then they seem ; face grows to face. 

Till breathless he disjoin'd, and backward drew 
The heavenly moisture, that sweet coral mouth. 
Whose precious taste her thirsty lips well knew, 
Whereon they surfeit, yet complain on drouth ; 



374 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



[Line 545-652. 



He with her plenty pressed, she faint with 
dearth, 545 

Their lips together glued, fall to the earth. 

Now quick desire hath caught the yielding prey, 
And glutton-like she feeds, yet never filleth ; 
Her lips are conquerors, his lips obey. 
Paying what ransom the insulter willeth ; 550 

Whose vulture-thought doth pitch the price so 
high. 

That she will draw his lips' rich treasure dry. 

And having felt the sweetness of the spoil, 
"With blindfold fury she begins to forage ; 554 
Her face doth reek and smoke, her blood doth boil. 
And careless lust stirs up a desperate courage. 
Planting oblivion, beating reason back. 
Forgetting shame's pure blush and honour's 
wrack. 

Hot, faint, and weary, with her hard embracing, 
Like a wild bird being tamed with too much hand- 
ling, 560 
Or as the fleet-foot roe that's tired with chasing. 
Or like the froward infant stili'd with dandling. 
He now obeys, and now no more resisteth, 
While she takes all she can, not all she listeth. 

What wax so frozen but dissolves with tempering. 
And yields at last to every light impression? 566 
Things out of hope are compass'd oft with ven- 
turing. 
Chiefly in love, whose leave exceeds commission ; 
Affection faints not like a pale-faced coward, 
But then woos best when most his choice is 
froward. 570 

When he did frown, O, had she then gave over. 
Such nectar from his lips she had not suck'd. 
Foul words and frowns must not repel a lover ; 
What though the rose have prickles, yet 'tis 
pluck'd ; 
Were beauty under twenty locks kept fast, 575 
Yet love breaks through, and picks them all at 
last. 

For pity now she can no more detain him ; 

The poor fool prays her that he may depart ; 

She is resolved no longer to restrain him ; 

Bids him farewell, and look well to her heart, 580 
The which, by Cupid's bow she doth protest. 
He carries thence incaged in his breast. 

'Sweet boy,' she says, 'this night Pll waste in 

sorrow. 
For my sick heart commands mine eyes to watch. 
Tell me, love's master, shall we meet to-mor- 
row? 585 
Say, shall we? shall we? wilt thou make the 
match ?' 
He tells her, no ; to-morrow he intends 
To hunt the boar with certain of his friends. 

' The boar !' quoth she ; whereat a sudden pale. 
Like lawn being spread upon the blushing rose, 590 
Usurps her cheek ; she trembles at his tale. 
And on his neck her yoking arms she throws ; 
She sinketh down, still hanging by his neck, 
He on her belly falls, she on her back. 



Now is she in the very lists of love, 595 

Her champion mounted for the hot encounter ; 

All is imaginary she doth prove, 

He will not manage her, although he mount her ; 
That worse than Tantalus' is her annoy, 
To clip Elysium, and to lack her joy. 600 

Even as poor birds, deceived with painted grapes, 
Do surfeit by the eye and pine the maw, 
Even so she languisheth in her mishaps. 
As those poor birds that helpless berries saw. 604 
The warm eflfects which she in him finds missing 
She seeks to kindle with continual kissing. 

But all in vain ; good queen, it will not loe ; 
She hath assay'd as much as may be proved ; 
Her pleading hath deserved a greater fee ; 
She's Love, she loves, and yet she is not loved. 610 

' Fie, fie,' he says, ' you crush me ; let me go ; 

You have no reason to withhold me so.' 

' Thou hadst been gone,' quoth she, ' sweet boy, ere 

this. 
But that thou told'st me thou wouldst hunt the 

boar. 
O, be advised ; thou know'st not what it is 615 
With javelin's point a churlish swine to gore. 
Whose tushes never sheathed he whetteth still, 
Like to a mortal butcher, bent to kill. 

' On his bow-back he hath a battle set 

Of bristly pikes, that ever threat his foes ; 620 

His eyes, like glow-worms, shine when he doth 

fret ; 
His snout digs sepulchres where'er he goes ; 

Being moved, he strikes whate'er is in his way; 

And whom he strikes his crooked tushes slay. 

' His brawny sides, with hairy bristles arm'd, 625 

Are better proof than thy spear's point can enter ; 

His short thick neck cannot be easily harm'd ; 

Being ireful, on the lion he will venture ; 
The thorny brambles and embracing bushes, 629 
As fearful of him, part j through whom he rushes. 

'Alas, he nought esteems that face of thine. 
To which Love's eyes pay tributary gazes ; 
Nor thy soft hands, sweet lips and crystal eyne. 
Whose full perfection all the world amazes ; 634 
But having thee at vantage, — wondrous dread ! — 
Would root these beauties as he roots the mead. 

' 0, let him keep his loathsome cabin still ; 

Beauty hath nought to do with such foul fiends ; 

Come not within his danger by thy will ; 6.39 

They that thrive well take counsel of their friends. 
When thou didst name the boar, not to dissemble, 
I fear'd thy fortune, and my joints did tremble. 

' Didst thou not mark my face? was it not white? 

Saw'st thou not signs of fear lurk in mine eye ? 

Grew I not faint? and fell I not downright? 645 

Within my bosom, whereon thou dost lie. 
My boding heart pants, beats, and takes no rest, 
But, like an earthquake, shakes thee on my 
breast. 

' For where Love reigns, disturbing Jealousy 
Doth call himself Aflection's sentinel ; 650 

Gives false alarms, suggesteth mutiny. 
And in a peaceful hour doth cry " Kill, kill !" 



Line 653-766.] 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



375 



Distempering gentle Love in his desire, 
As air and water do abate the fire. 

' This sour informer, this bate-breeding spy, 655 
This canker that eats up Love's tender spring. 
This carry-tale, dissentious Jealousy, 
That sometime true news, sometime false doth 
bring. 
Knocks at my heart, and whispers in mine ear. 
That if I love thee, I thy death should fear; 660 

' And more than so, presenteth to mine eye 
The picture of an angry-chafing boar, 
Under whose sharp fangs on his back doth lie 
An image like thyself, all stained with gore ; 
Whose blood upon the fresh flowers being shed 
Doth make them droop with grief and hang the 
head. 666 

' What should I do, seeing thee so indeed, 

That tremble at the imagination ? 

The thought of it doth make my faint heart bleed, 

And fear doth teach it divination ; 670 

I prophesy thy death, my living sorrow. 
If thou encounter with the boar to-morrow. 

' But if thou needs wilt hunt, be ruled by me ; 
Uncouple at the timorous flying hare, 
Or at the fox which lives by subtlety, 675 

Or at the roe which no encounter dare ; 
Pursue these fearful creatures o'er the downs. 
And on thy well-breath'd horse keep with thy 
hounds. 

' And when thou hast on foot the purblind hare, 
Mark the poor wretch, to overshoot his troubles. 
How he outruns the wind, and with what care 681 
He cranks and crosses with a thousand doubles ; 
The many musits through the which he goes 
Are like a labyrinth to amaze his foes. 

' Sometime he runs among a flock of sheep, 685 
To make the cunning hounds mistake their smell, 
And sometime where earth-delving conies keep. 
To stop the loud pursuers in their yell ; 
And sometime sorteth with a herd of deer : 
Danger deviseth shifts ; wit waits on fear ; 690 

' For there his smell with others being mingled. 
The hot scent-snufBng hounds are driven to doubt. 
Ceasing their clamorous cry till they have singled 
With much ado the cold fault cleanly out ; 
Then do they spend their mouths ; Echo replies. 
As if another chase were in the skies. 696 

' By this, poor Wat, far oflf upon a hill. 
Stands on his hinder legs with listening ear, 
To hearken if his foes pursue him still ; 
Anon their loud alarums he doth hear ; 700 

And now his grief may be compared well 
To one sore sick that hears the passing-bell. 

' Then shalt thou see the dew-bedabbled wretch 
Turn, and return, indenting with the way; 
Each envious brier his weary legs doth scratch, 705 
Each shadow makes him stop, each murmur stay ; 
For misery is trodden on by many, 
And being low never relieved by any. 



' Lie quietly, and hear a little more ; 
Nay, do not struggle, for thou shalt not rise ; 710 
To make thee hate the hunting of the boar. 
Unlike myself thou hear'st me moralize, 

Applying this to that, and so to so ; 

For love can comment upon every woe. 

' Where did I leave ?' ' No matter where,' quoth he ; 

'Leave me, and then the story aptly ends ; 716 

The night is spent.' ' Why, what of that ?' quoth 
she. 

' I am,' quoth he, ' expected of my friends ; 
And now 'tis dark, and going I shall fall.' 
' In night,' quoth she, ' desire sees best of all. 720 

' But if thou fall, O, then imagine this, 

The earth, in love with thee, thy footing trips, 

And all is but to rob thee of a kiss. 

Rich preys make true men thieves ; so do thy lips 
Make modest Diau cloudy and forlorn, 725 

Lest she should steal a kiss, and die forsworn. 

' Now of this dark night I perceive the reason : 
Cynthia for shame obscures her silver shine, 
Till forging Nature be condemn'd of treason, 729 
For stealing moulds from heaven that were divine ; 

Wherein she framed thee, in high heaven's 
despite. 

To shame the sun by day and her by night. 

' And therefore hath she bribed the Destinies 
To cross the curious workmanship of nature, 
To mingle beauty with infirmities 735 

And pure perfection with impure defeature ; 
Making it subject to the tyranny 
Of mad mischances and much misery ; 

' As burning fevers, agues pale and faint, 
Life-poisoning pestilence and frenzies wood, 740 
The marrow-eating sickness, whose attaint 
Disorder breeds, by heating of the blood ; 
Surfeits, imposthumes, grief and damn'd despair. 
Swear Nature's death for framing thee so fair. 

' And not the least of all these maladies 745 

But in one minute's fight brings beauty under ; 
Both favour, savour, hue and qualities, 
Whereat the impartial gazer late did wonder, 
Are on the sudden wasted, thaw'd and done, 749 
As mountain snow melts with the mid-day sun. 

' Therefore, despite of fruitless chastity. 
Love-lacking vestals and self-loving nuns. 
That on the earth would breed a scarcity 
And barren dearth of daughters and of sons. 
Be prodigal ; the lamp that burns by night 755 
Dries up his oil to lend the world his light. 

' What is thy body but a swallowing grave, 

Seeming to bury that posterity 

Which by the rights of time thou needs must have, 

If thou destroy them not in dark obscurity ? 760 
If so, the world will hold thee in disdain, 
Sith in thy pride so fair a hope is slain. 

' So in thyself thyself art made away ; 
A mischief worse than civil home-bred strife, 
Or theirs whose desperate hands themselves do 
slay, 765 

Or butcher-sire that reaves his son of life. 



376 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



[Line 767-880. 



Foul-cankering rust the hidden treasure frets, 
But gold that's put to use more gold begets.' 

' Nay, then,' quoth Adon, ' you will fall again 
Into your idle over-handled theme ; 770 

The kiss I gave you is bestow'd in vain, 
And all in vain you strive against the stream ; 
For, by this black-faced night, desire's foul 

nurse. 
Your treatise makes me like you worse and 
worse. 

' If love have lent you twenty thousand tongues, 
And every tongue more moving than your own, 776 
Bewitching like the wanton mermaid's songs, 
Yet from mine ear the tempting tune is blown ; 
For know, my heart stands armed in mine ear. 
And will not let a false sound enter there ; 780 

' Lest the deceiving harmony should run 

Into the quiet closure of my breast ; 

And then my little heart were quite undone. 

In his bedchamber to be barr'd of rest. 
No, lady, no ; my heart longs not to groan, 785 
But soundly sleeps, while now it sleeps alone. 

'What have you urged that I cannot reprove? 

The path is smooth that leadeth on to danger ; 

I hate not love, but your device in love 

That lends embracements unto every stranger. 790 
You do it for increase : O strange excuse. 
When reason is the bawd to lust's abuse ! 

' Call it not love, for Love to heaven is fled 
Since sweating Lust on earth usurp'd his name ; 
Under whose simple semblance he hath fed 795 
Upon fresh beauty, blotting it with blame ; 
Which the hot tyrant stains and soon bereaves, 
As caterpillars do the tender leaves. 

' Love comforteth like sunshine after rain. 
But Lust's effect is tempest after sun ; 800 

Love's gentle spring doth always fresh remain, 
Lust's winter comes ere summer half be done ; 
Love surfeits not^ Lust like a glutton dies j 
Love is all truth, Lust full of forged lies. 

' More I could tell, but more I dare not say ; 805 

The text is old, the orator too green. 

Therefore, in sadness, now I will away ; 

My face is full of shame, my heart of teen ; 
Mine ears, that to your wanton talk attended. 
Do burn themselves for having so offended.' 810 

With this, he breaketh from the sweet embrace 
Of those fair arms which bound him to her breast, 
And homeward through the dark lawnd runs 

apace ; 
Leaves Love upon her back deeply distress'd. 
Look, how a bright star shooteth from the sky, 
So glides he in the night from Venus' eye ; 816 

Which after him she darts, as one on shore 
Gazing upon a late-embarked friend. 
Till the wild waves will have him seen no more, 
Whose ridges with the meeting clouds contend ; 820 
So did the merciless and pitchy night 
Fold in the object that did feed her sight. 



Whereat amazed, as one that unaware 
Hath dropp'd a precious jewel in the flood. 
Or 'stonish'd as night-wanderers often are, 825 
Their light blown out in sonie mistrustful wood ; 
Even so confounded in the dark she lay. 
Having lost the fair discovery of her way. 

And now she beats her heart, whereat it groans. 
That all the neighbor caves, as seeming troubled. 
Make verbal repetition of her moans ; 831 

Passion on passion deeply is redoubled ; 
' Ay me !' she cries, and twenty times, ' Woe, woe !' 
And twenty echoes twenty times cry so. 

She, marking them, begins a wailing note, 835 

And sings extemporally a woeful ditty ; 

How love makes young men thrall, and old men 
dote; 

How love is wise in folly, foolish-witty ; 
Her heavy anthem still concludes in woe, 
And still the choir of echoes answer so. 8.40 

Her song was tedious, and outwore the night. 
For lovers' hours are long, though seeming short ; 
If pleased themselves, others, they think, delight 
In such-like circumstance, with such-like sport ; 
Their copious stories, oftentimes begun, 8-15 
End without audience, and are never done. 

For who hath she to spend the night withal, 
But idle sounds resembling parasites ; 
Like shrill-tongued tapsters answering every call. 
Soothing the humour of fantastic wits ? 850 

She says ' 'Tis so :' they answer all ' 'Tis so ;' 
And would say after her, if she said ' No.' 

Lo, here the gentle lark, weary of rest. 
From his moist cabinet mounts up on high. 
And wakes the morning, from whose silver breast 
The sun ariseth in his majesty ; 856 

Who doth the world so gloriously behold. 
That cedar-tops and hills seem burnish'd gold. 

Venus salutes him with this fair good-morrow ; 

' thou clear god, and patron of all light, 860 

From whom each lamp and shining star doth bor- 
row 

The beauteous influence that makes him bright, 
There lives a son, that suek'd an earthly mother, 
May lend thee light, as thou dost lend to other.' 

This said, she hasteth to a myrtle grove, 865 

Musing the morning is so much o'erworn. 
And yet she hears no tidings of her love ; 
She hearkens for his hounds and for his horn ; 
Anon she hears them, chant it lustily. 
And all in haste she coasteth to the cry. 870 

And as she runs, the bushes in the way 
Some catch her by the neck, some kiss her face, 
Some twine about her thigh to make her stay ; 
She wildly breaketh from their strict embrace, 874 
Like a milch doe, whose swelling dugs do ache, 
Hasting to feed her fawn hid in some brake. 

By this she hears the hounds are at a bay ; 
Whereat she starts, like one that spies an adder 
Wreathed up in fatal folds just in his way. 
The fear whereof doth make him shake and shud- 
der ; 880 



Line 88 1-994.] 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



Zll 



Even so the timorous yelping of the hounds 
Appals her senses and her spirit confounds. 

For now she knows it is no gentle chase, 
But the blunt boar, rough bear, or lion proud, 
Because the cry remaineth in one place, 885 

Where fearfully the dogs exclaim aloud ; 
Finding their enemy to be so curst. 
They all strain courtesy who shall cope him first. 

This dismal cry rings sadly in her ear. 
Through which it enters to surprise her heart ; 890 
Who, overcome by doubt and bloodless fear. 
With cold-pale weakness numbs each feeling part ; 

Like soldiers, when their captain once doth 
yield. 

They basely fly, and dare not stay the field. 

Thus stands she in a trembling ecstasy ; 895 

TUl, cheering up her senses all dismay'd, 
She tells them 'tis a causeless fantasy. 
And childish error, that they are afraid ; 

Bids them leave quaking, bids them fear no 
more ; 899 

And with that word she spied the hunted boar ; 

Whose frothy mouth, bepainted all with red, 
Like milk and blood being mingled both together, 
A second fear through all her sinews spread, 
Which madly hurries her she knows not whither ; 
This way she runs, and now she will no further. 
But back retires to rate the boar for murther. 906 

A thousand spleens bear her a thousand ways ; 
She treads the path that she untreads again ; 
Her more than haste is mated with delays. 
Like the proceedings of a drunken brain, 910 

Full of respects, yet nought at all respecting ; 

In hand with all things, nought at all effecting. 

Here kennell'd in a brake she finds a hound. 
And asks the weary caitiff for his master ; 
And their another licking of his wound, 915 

'Gainst venom'd sores the only sovereign plaster ; 
And here she meets another sadly scowling. 
To whom she speaks, and he replies with howl- 



When he hath ceased his ill-resounding noise. 
Another flap-mouth'd mourner, black and grim. 
Against the welkin volleys out his voice ; 921 
Another and another answer him. 
Clapping their proud tails to the ground below. 
Shaking their scratch'd ears, bleeding as they go. 

Look, how the world's poor people are amazed 
At apparitions, signs, and prodigies, 926 

Whereon with fearful eyes they long have gazed. 
Infusing them with dreadful prophecies ; 
So she at these sad signs draws up her breath. 
And, sighing it again, exclaims on Death. 930 

' Hard-favour'd tyrant, ugly, meagre, lean, 
Hateful divorce of love,' — thus chides she Death, — 
'Grim-grinning ghost, earth's worm, what dost 

thou mean 
To stifle beauty and to steal his breath, 

Who when he lived, his breath and beauty set 
Gloss on the rose, smell to the violet ? 936 



' If he be dead, — O no, it cannot be, 
Seeing his beauty, thou shouldst strike at it ;— 
yes, it may ; thou hast no eyes to see. 
But hatefully at random dost thou hit. 940 

Thy mark is feeble age ; but thy false dart 
Mistakes that aim, and cleaves an infant's heart. 

' Hadst thou but bid beware, then he had spoke, 
And, hearing him, thy power had lost his power. 
The Destinies will curse thee for this stroke ; 945 
They bid thee crop a weed, thou pluck'st a flower ; 
Love's golden arrow at him should have fled. 
And not Death's ebon dart, to strike him dead. 

' Dost thou drink tears, that thou provokest such 

weeping? 
What may a heavy groan advantage thee? 950 
Why hast thou cast into eternal sleeping 
Those eyes that taught all other eyes to see? 
Now Nature cares not for thy mortal vigour, 
Since her best work is ruin'd with thy rigour.' 

Here overcome, as one full of despair, 955 

She v^il'd her eyelids, who, like sluices, stopp'd 
The crystal tide that from her two cheeks fair 
In the sweet channel of her bosom dropp'd ; 

But through the flood-gates breaks the silver 
rain. 

And with his strong course opens them again. 960 

O, how her eyes and tears did lend and borrow ! 

Her eyes seen in the tears, tears in her eye ; 

Both crystals, where they view'd each other's 
sorrow. 

Sorrow that friendly sighs sought still to dry ; 
But like a stormy day, now wind, now rain, 965 
Sighs dry her cheeks, tears make them wet again. 

Variable passions throng her constant woe, 
As striving who should best becom-e her grief; 
All entertain'd, each passion labours so 
That every present sorrow seemeth chief, 970 
But none is best ; then join they all together, 
Like many clouds consulting for foul weather. 

By this, far off she hears some huntsman holloa ; 

A nurse's song ne'er pleased her babe so well ; 

The dire imagination she did follow 975 

This sound of hope doth labour to expel ; 
For now reviving joy bids her rejoice. 
And flatters her it is Adonis' voice. 

Whereat her tears began to turn their tide. 
Being prison'd in her eye like pearls in glass; 980 
Yet sometimes falls an orient drop beside. 
Which her cheek melts, as scorning it should pass 
To wash the foul face of the sluttish ground. 
Who is but drunken when she seemeth drown'd. 

hard-believing love, how strange it seems 985 

Not to believe, and yet too credulous ! 

Thy weal and woe are both of them extremes ; 

Despair, and hope, makes thee ridiculous ; 988 
The one doth flatter thee in thoughts unlikely, 
In likely thoughts the other kills thee quickly. 

Now she unweaves the web that she hath wrought ; 
Adonis lives, and Death is not to blame ; 
It was not she that call'd him all to nought ; 
Now she adds honours to his hateful name; 



378 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



[Line 995-1102. 



She clepes him king of graves, and grave for 
kings, 995 

Imperious supreme of all mortal things. 

'No, no,' quoth she, 'sweet Death, I did but jest; 
Yet pardon me, I felt a kind of fear 
Whenas I met the boar, that bloody beast, 
Which knows no pity, but is still severe ; 1000 
Then, gentle shadow, — truth I must confess, — 
I rail'd on thee, fearing my love's decease. 

' 'Tis not my fault ; the boar provoked my tongue ; 

Be wreak'd on him, invisible commander ; 1004 

'Tis he, foul creature, that hath done thee wrong ; 

I did but act, he's author of thy slander ; 
Grief hath two tongues ; and never woman yet 
Could rule them both without ten women's wit.' 

Thus hoping that Adonis is alive. 
Her rash suspect she doth extenuate ; 1010 

And that his beauty may the better thrive. 
With Death she humbly doth insinuate ; 
Tells him of trophies, statues, tombs, and stories 
His victories, his triumphs and his glories. 

' Jove,' quoth she, ' how much a fool was I 
To be of such a weak and silly mind 1016 

To wail his death who lives and must not die 
Till mutual overthrow of mortal kind! 
For he being dead, with him is beauty slain, 
And, beauty dead, black chaos comes again. 1020 

' Fie, fie, fond love, thou art so full of fear 

As one with treasure laden, hemm'd with thieves ; 

Trifles unwitnessed with eye or ear 

Thy coward heart with false bethinking grieves.' 
Even at this word she hears a merry horn, 1025 
Whereat she leaps that was but late forlorn. 

As falcons to the lure, away she flies ; 

The grass stoops not, she treads on it so light ; 

And in her haste unfortunately spies 

The foul boar's conquest on her fair delight; 10.30 
Which seen, her eyes, as murder'd with the view, 
Like stars ashamed of day, themselves with- 
drew ; 

Or, as the snail, whose tender horns being hit, 
Shrinks backward in his shelly cave with pain. 
And there all smother'd up in shade doth sit, 1035 
Long after fearing to creep forth again ; 
So, at his bloody view, her eyes are fled 
Into the deep-dark cabins of her head ; 

Where they resign their ofi5ce and their light 
To the disposing of her troubled brain ; 1040 

Who bids them still consort with ugly night, 
And never wound the heart with looks again ; 
Who, like a king perplexed in his throne, 
By their suggestion gives a deadly groan. 

Whereat each tributary subject quakes ; 1045 
As when the wind, imprison'd in the ground. 
Struggling for passage, earth's foundation shakes, 
Which with cold terror doth men's minds con- 
found. 
This mutiny each part doth so surprise, 
That from their dark beds once more leap her 
eyes; 1050 



And being open'd threw unwilling light 

Upon the wide wound that the boar had trench'd 

In his soft flank ; whose wonted lily white 

With purple tears, that his wound wept, was 

drench'd. 1054 

Ko flower was nigh, no grass, herb, leaf, or weed, 

But stole his blood and seem'd with him to bleed. 

This solemn sympathy poor Venus noteth ; 
Over one shoulder doth she hang her head; 
Dumbly she passions, franticly she doteth; 
She thinks he could not die, he is not dead ; 1060 

Her voice is stopp'd, her joints forget to bow ; 

Her eyes are mad that they have wept till now. 

Upon his hurt she looks so steadfastly 
That her sight dazzling makes the wound seem 
three ; 1064 

And then she reprehends her mangling eye, 
That makes more gashes where no breach should 
be; 
His face seems twain, each several limb is dou- 
bled; 
For oft the eye mistakes, the brain being trou- 
bled. 

' My tongue cannot express my grief for one. 
And yet,' quoth she, ' behold two Adons dead ! 1070 
My sighs are blown away, my salt tears gone. 
Mine eyes are turn'd to fire, my heart to lead ; 

Heavy heart's lead, melt at mine eyes' red fire ! 

So shall I die by drops of hot desire. 

'Alas, poor world, what treasure hast thou lost ! 1075 
What face remains alive that's worth the viewing? 
Whose tongue is music now ? what canst thou boast 
Of things long since, or any thing ensuing? 

The flowers are sweet, their colours fresh and 
trim ; 1079 

But true-sweet beauty lived and died with him. 

' Bonnet nor veil henceforth no creature wear ! 

Nor sun nor wind will ever strive to kiss you ; 

Having no fair to lose, you need not fear ; 

The sun doth scorn you, and the wind doth hiss 
you ; 1084 

But when Adonis lived, sun and sharp air 
Lurk'd like two thieves, to rob him of his fair. 

'And therefore would he put his bonnet on. 
Under whose brim the gaudj' sun would peep ; 
The wind would blow it ofl", and, being gone. 
Play with his locks ; then would Adonis weep ; 1090 
And straight, in pity of his tender years. 
They both would strive who first should dry his 
tears. 

' To see his face the lion walk'd along 
Behind some hedge, because he would notfearhim; 
To recreate himself when he hath sung, 1095 
The tiger would be tame and gently hear him ; 
If he had spoke, the wolf would leave his prey, 
And never fright the sUly lamb that day. 

' When he beheld his shadow in the brook, 
The fishes spread on it their golden gills ; 1100 
When he was by, the birds such pleasure took. 
That some would sing, some other in their bills 



Line 1103-1194.] 



VENUS AND ADONIS 



379 



Would bring him mulberries and ripe-red cher- 
ries ; 

He fed them with his sight, they him with ber- 
ries. 

' But this foul, grim, and urchin-snouted boar, 1105 
Whose downward eye still looketh for a grave, 
Ne'er saw the beauteous livery that he wore; 
Witness the entertainment that he gave ; 
If he did see his face, why then I know 1109 
He thought to kiss him, and hath kOl'd him so. 

' 'Tis true, 'tis true ; thus was Adonis slain ; 
He ran upon the boar with his sharp spear, 
Who did not whet his teeth at him again, 
But by a kiss thought to persuade him there ; 
And nuzzling in his flank, the loving swine 1115 
Sheathed unaware the tusk in his soft groin. 

' Had I been tooth'd like him, I must confess. 
With kissing him I should have kill'd him first; 
But he is dead, and never did he bless 
My youth with his ; the more am I accurst.' 1120 
With this, she falleth in the place she stood. 
And stains her face with his congealed blood. 

She looks upon his lips, and they are pale ; 

She takes him by the hand, and that is cold ; 

She whispers in his ears a heavy tale, 1125 

As if they heard the woeful words she told ; 
She lifts the coffer-lids that close his eyes. 
Where, lo, two lamps, burnt out, in darkness lies ; 

Two glasses, where herself herself beheld 
A thousand times, and now no more reflect ; 1130 
Their virtue lost, wherein they late excell'd, 
And every beauty robb'd of his effect ; 

' Wonder of time,' quoth she, ' this is my spite. 
That, thou being dead, the day should yet be 
Ught. 

' Since thou art dead, lo, here I prophesy, 1135 
Sorrow on love hereafter shall attend ; 
It shall be waited on with jealousy, 
Find sweet beginning but unsavoury end ; 
Ne'er settled equally, but high or low, 1139 
That all love's pleasure shall not match his woe. 

' It shall be fickle, false, and full of fraud ; 

Bud, and be blasted, in a breathing while ; 

The bottom poison, and the top o'erstraw'd 

With sweets that shall the truest sight beguile ; 
The strongest body shall it make most weak, 1145 
Strike the wise dumb, and teach the fool to speak. 

' It shall be sparing and too full of riot, 
Teaching decrepit age to tread the measures; 
The staring ruffian shall it keep in quiet, 
Pluck down the rich, enrich the poor with treas- 
ures ; 1150 



It shall be raging-mad, and silly-mild. 
Make the young old, the old become a child. 

' It shall suspect where is no cause of fear ; 

It shall not fear where it should most mistrust ; 

It shall be merciful and too severe, 1155 

And most deceiving when it seems most just ; 
Perverse it shall be where it shows most toward, 
Put fear to valour, courage to the coward. 

' It shall be cause of war and dire events, 
And set dissension 'twixt the son and sire ; 1160 
Subject and servile to all discontents, 
As dry combustious matter is to fire ; 
Sith in his prime death doth my love destroy, 
They that love best their loves shall not enjoy.' 

By this the boy that by her side lay kill'd 1165 

Was melted like a vapour from her sight, 

And in his blood, that on the ground lay spill'd, 

A purple flower sprung up, chequer'd with white, 

Resembling well his pale cheeks and the blood 

Which in round drops upon their whiteness 

stood. 1170 

She bows her head, the new-sprung flower to smell, 

Comparing it to her Adonis' breath ; 

And says, within her bosom it shall dwell. 

Since he himself is reft from her by death ; 
She crops the stalk, and in the breach appears 
Green-dropping sap, which she compares to 
tears. 1176 

' Poor flower,' quoth she, ' this was thy father's 
guise, — 

Sweet issue of a more sweet-smelling sire, — 

For every little grief to wet his eyes ; 

To grow unto himself was his desire, IISO 

And so 'tis thine ; but know, it is as good 
To wither in my breast as in his blood. 

' Here was thy father's bed, here in my breast ; 

Thou art the next of blood, and 'tis thy right ; 

Lo, in this hollow cradle take thy rest ; 1185 

My throbbing heart shall rock thee day and night ; 
There shall not be one minute in an hour 
Wherein I will not kiss my sweet love's flower.' 

Thus weary of the world, away she hies, 1189 
And yokes her silver doves; by whose swift aid 
Their mistress, mounted, through the empty skies 
In her light chariot quickly is convey'd ; 

Holding their course to Paphos, where their 
queen 

Means to immure herself and not be seen. 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



From the besieged Ardea all in post, 
Borne by the trustless wings of false desire, 
Lust-breathed Tarquin leaves the Roman host, 
And to Gollatium bears the lightless fire 
Which, in pale embers hid, lurks to aspire 5 

And girdle with embracing flames the waist 
Of CoUatine's fair love, Lucrece the chaste. 

Haply that name of 'chaste' unhappily set 
This bateless edge on his keen appetite ; 
When CoUatine unwisely did not let 10 

To praise the clear unmatched red and white 
Which triumph'd in that sky of his delight. 

Where mortal stars, as bright as heaven's beau- 
ties, 

With pure aspects did him peculiar duties. 

For he the night before, in Tarquin's tent, 15 
Unlock'd the treasure of his happy state ; 
What priceless wealth the heavens had him lent 
In the possession of his beateous mate ; 
Reckoning his fortune at such high-proud rate. 
That kings might be espoused to more fame, 20 
But king nor peer to such a peerless dame. 

O happiness enjoy'd but of a few ! 
And, if possess'd, as soon decay'd and done 
As is the morning's silver-melting dew 
Against the golden splendour of the sun! 25 

An expired date, cancell'd ere well begun : 
Honour and beauty, in the owner's arms. 
Are weakly fortress'd from a world of harms. 

Beauty itself doth of itself persuade 
The eyes of men without an orator ; 30 

What needeth then apologies be made, 
To set forth that which is so singular? 
Or why is Collatine the publisher 
Of that rich jewel he should keep unknown 
From thievish ears, because it is his own ? 35 

Perchance his boast of Lucrece' sovereignty 
Suggested this proud issue of a king ; 
For by our ears our hea'rts oft tainted be ; 
Perchance that envy of so rich a thing. 
Braving compare, disdainfully did sting 40 

His high-pitch'd thoughts, that meaner men 
should vaunt 

That golden hap which their superiors want. 

But some untimely thought did instigate 
His all-too-timeless speed, if none of those ; 
His honour, his affairs, his friends, his state, 45 
Keglected all, with swift intent he goes 
To quench the coal which in his liver glows. 
O rash-false heat, wrapp'd in repentant cold, 
Thy hasty spring still blasts, and ne'er grows 
old! 

380 



When at Collatium this false lord arrived, 50 
Well was he welcomed by the Roman dame. 
Within whose face beauty and virtue strived 
Which of them both should underprop her fame ; 
When virtue bragg'd, beauty would blush for 
shame ; 
When beauty boasted blushes, in despite 55 
Virtue would stain that o'er with silver white. 

But beauty, in that white intituled. 
From Venus' doves doth challenge that fair field ; 
Then virtue claims from beauty beauty's red, 
Which virtue gave the golden age to gild 60 

Their silver cheeks, and call'd it then their shield i 
Teaching them thus to use it in the fight. 
When shame assail'd,* the red should fence ffiie 
white. 

This heraldry in Lucrece' face was seen. 
Argued by beauty's red and virtue's white ; 65 
Of cither's colour was the other queen. 
Proving from world's minority their right ; 
Yet their ambition makes them still to fight ; 
The sovereignty of either being so great. 
That oft they interchange each other's seat. 70 

This silent war of lilies and of roses, 
Which Tarquin view'd in her fair face's field, 
In their pure ranks his traitor eye encloses ; 
Where, lest between them both it should be kill'd, 
The coward captive vanquished doth yield 75 
To those two armies, tliat would let him go 
Rather than triumph in so false a foe. 

Now thinks he that her husband's shallow tongue, 
The niggard prodigal that praised her so. 
In that high task hath done her beauty wrong, SO 
Which far exceeds his barren skill to show ; 
Therefore that praise which Collatine doth owe 
Enchanted Tarquin answers with surmise, 
In silent wonder of still-gazing eyes. 

This earthly saint, adored by this devil, 85 

Little suspecteth the false worshipper ; 

For unstain'd thoughts do seldom dream on evil ; 

Birds never limed no secret bushes fear ; 

So guiltless she securely gives good cheer 
And reverend welcome to her princely guest, 90 
AVhose inward iU no outward harm express'd ; 

For that he colour'd with his high estate, 
Hiding base sin in plaits of majesty ; 
That nothing in him seem'd inordinate. 
Save sometime too much wonder of his eye, 95 
Which, having all, all could not satisfy ; 
But, poorly rich, so wanteth in his store, 
That, cloy'd with much, he pineth still for more. 



Line 99-215.] 



THE J? APE OF LUCRECE 



381 



But she, that never coped with stranger eyes, 
Could pick no meaning from their parling loolcs, 
Nor read the subtle-shining secrecies 101 

Writ in the glassy margents of such books; 
She touch'd no unknown baits, nor fear'd no 
hooks ; 
Nor could she moralize his wanton sight, 
More than his eyes were open'd to the light. 105 

He stories to her ears her husband's fame, 
Won in the fields of fruitful Italy; 
And decks with praises Collatine's high name, 
Made glorious by his manly chivalry 
With bruised arms and wreaths of victory ; 110 
Her joy with heaved-up hand she doth express, 
And wordless so greets heaven for his success. 

Far from the purpose of his coming liither. 
He makes excuses for his being there ; 
No cloudy show of stormy blustering weather 
Doth yet in his fair welkin once appear; 116 

Till sable Night, mother of dread and fear. 
Upon the world dim darkness doth display. 
And in her vanity prison stows the day. 

For then is Tarquin brought unto his bed, 120 
Intending weariness witl> heavy spright ; 
For after supper long he questioned 
With modest Lucrece, and wore out the night ; 
Now leaden slumber with life's strength doth 
tight; 
And every one to rest themselves betake, 125 
Save thieves and cares and troubled minds that 
wake. 

As one of which doth Tarquin lie revolving 
The sundry dangers of his will's obtaining ; 
Yet ever to obtain his will resolving. 
Though weak-built hopes persuade him to ab- 
staining ; 130 
Despair to gain doth traffic oft for gaining. 
And when great treasure is the meed proposed, 
Though death be adjunct, there's no death sup- 
Xwsed. 

Those that much covet are with gain so fond 
That what they have not, that which they possess, 
They scatter and unloose it from their bond, 136 
And so, by hoping more, they have but less ; 
Or, gaining more, the profit of excess 
Is but to surfeit, and such griefs sustain. 
That they prove bankrupt in this poor-rich gain. 

The aim of all is but to nurse the life 141 

With honour, wealth, and ease, in waning age; 
And in this aim there is such thwarting strife 
That one for all or all for one we gage ; 
As life for honour in fell battle's rage ; 145 

Honour for wealth ; and oft that wealth doth cost 
The death of all, and all together lost. 

So that in venturing ill we leave to be 
The things we are for tliat which we expect ; 
And this ambitious, foul infirmity, 150 

In having much, torments us with defect 
Of that we have; so then we do neglect 
The thing we have, and, all for want of wit. 
Make something nothing by augmenting it. 



Such hazard now must doting Tarquin make, 
Pawning his honor to obtain his lust ; 156 

And for himself himself he must forsake ; 
Then where is truth, if there be no self-trust? 
When shall he think to find a stranger just, 
When he himself himself confounds, betrays 
To slanderous tongues and wretched hateful 
days? 161 

Now stole upon the time the dead of night. 
When heavy sleep had closed up mortal eyes; 
No comfortable star did lend his light, 164 

No noise but owls' and wolves' death-boding cries; 
Now serves the season that they may surprise 
The silly lambs : pure thoughts are dead and still, 
While lust and murder wakes to stain and kill. 

And now this lustful lord leap'd from his bed. 
Throwing his mantle rudely o'er his arm ; 170 
Is madly toss'd between desire and dread; 
Th' one sweetly flattei-s, th' other feareth harm ; 
But honest fear, bewitch'd with lust's foul charm, 
Doth too too oft betake him to retire, 
Beaten away by brain-sick rude desire. 175 

His falchion on a flint he softly smiteth, 
That from the cold stone sparks of fire do fly ; 
Whereat a waxen torch forthwith he lighteth, 
Which must be lode-star to his lustful eye ; 
And to the flame thus speaks advisedly : 180 

' As from this cold flint I enforced this fire. 
So Lucrece must I force to my desire.' 

Here pale with fear he doth premeditate 
The dangers of his loathsome enterprise, 
And in his inward mind he doth debate 185 

What following sorrow may on this arise ; 
Then looking scornfully he doth despise 
His naked armour of still-slaughter'd lust, 
And justly thus controls his thoughts unjust: 

' Fair torch, burn out thy light, and lend it not 
To darken her whose light excelleth thine ; 191 
And die, unhallow'd thoughts, before you blot 
With your uncloanness that which is divine ; 
Ofifer pure incense to so pure a shrine ; 
Let fair humanity abhor the deed 195 

That spots and stains love's modest snow-white 
weed. 

' shame to knighthood and to shining arms ! 

foul dishonour to my household's grave ! 

impious act, including all foul harms ! 

A martial man to be soft f'ancy's slave ! 200 

True valour still a true respect should have ; 
Then my digression is so vile, so base, 
That it will live engraven in my face. 

' Yea, though I die, the scandal will survive. 
And be an eye-sore in my golden coat ; 205 

Some loathsome dash the herald will contrive, 
To cipher me how fondly I did dote ; 
That my posterity, shamed with the note, 
Shall curse my bon«s, and hold it for no sin 
To wish that 1 their father had not bin. 210 

' What win I, if I gain the thing I seek ? 
A dream, a breath, a froth of fleeting joy. 
Who buys a minute's mirth to wail a week ? 
Or sells eternity to get a toy? 214 

For one sweet grape who will the vine destroy? 



882 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



[Line 216-331. 



Or what fond beggar, but to touch the crown, 
Would with the sceptre straight be strucken 
down? 

' If Collatinus dream of my intent, 
Will he not wake, and in a desperate rage 
Post hither, this vile purpose to prevent? 220 
This siege that hath engirt his marriage, 
This blur to youth, this sorrow to the sage, 
This dying virtue, this surviving shame, 
Whose crime will bear an ever-during blame ? 

' O what excuse can my invention make, 225 

When thou shalt charge me with so black a deed? 
Will not my tongue be mute, my frail joints shake. 
Mine eyes forego their light, my false heart bleed ? 
The guilt being great, the fear doth still exceed ; 
And extreme fear can neither fight nor fly, 230 
But coward-like with trembling terror die. 

' Had Collatinus kill'd my son or sire, 
Or lain in ambush to betray my life, 
Or were he not my dear friend, this desire 
Might have excuse to work upon his wife, 235 
As in revenge or quittal of such strife ; 
But as he is my kinsman, my dear friend, 
The shame and fault finds no excuse nor end. 

' Shameful it is ; ay, if the fact be known ; 

Hateful it is ; there is no hate in loving ; 240 

I'll beg her love ; but she is not her own ; 

The worst is but denial and reproving ; 

My will is strong, past reason's weak removing. 
Who fears a sentence or an old man's saw 
Shall by a painted cloth be kept in awe.' 245 

Thus graceless holds he disputation 
'Tween frozen conscience and hot-burning will, 
And with good thoughts makes dispensation. 
Urging the worser sense for vantage still ; 
Which in a moment doth confound and kill 250 
All pure effects, and doth so far proceed 
That what is vile shows like a virtuous deed. 

Quoth he, ' She took me kindly by the hand, 
And gazed for tidings in my eager eyes. 
Fearing some hard news from the warlike band, 
Where her beloved Collatinus lies. 256 

O, how her fear did make her colour rise! 
First red as roses that on lawn we lay, 
Then white as lawn, the roses took away. 

'And how her hand, in my hand being lock'd, 260 
Forced it to tremble with her loyal fear ! 
Which struck her sad, and then it faster rock'd, 
Until her husband's welfare she did hear ; 
Whereat she smiled with so sweet a cheer 
That had Narcissus seen her as she stood 265 
Self-love had never drown'd him in the flood. 

' Why hunt I then for colour or excuses ? 

All orators are dumb when beauty pleadeth ; 

Poor wretches have remorse in poor abuses ; 

Love thrives not in the heart that shadows dread- 
eth ; 270 

Afifection is my captain, and he leadeth ; 
And when his gaudy banner is display 'd, 
The coward fights, and will not be dismay'd. 



' Then, childish fear, avaunt ! debating, die ! 
Eespect and reason wait on wrinkled age ! 275 
My heart shall never countermand mine eye ; 
Sad pause and deep regard beseems the sage ; 
My part is youth, and beats these from the stage ; 

Desire my pilot is, beauty my prize ; 

Then who fears sinking where such treasure 
lies ?' 280 

As corn o'ergrown by weeds, so heedful fear 

Is almost choked by unresisted lust. 

Away he steals with open listening ear, 

Full of foul hope and full of fond mistrust ; 

Both which, as servitors to the unjust, 285 

So cross him with their opiDOsite persuasion. 
That now he vows a league, and now invasion. 

Within his thought her heavenly image sits, 
And in the self-same seat sits Collatine ; 
That eye which looks on her confounds his wits ; 
That eye which him beholds, as more divine, 291 
Unto a view so false will not incline ; 
But with a pure appeal seeks to the heart, 
Which once corrupted takes the worser part ; 

And therein heartens up his servile powers, 295 
Who, flatter'd by their leader's jocund show, 
Stufi" up his lust, as miflutes fill up hours ; 
And as their captain, so their pride doth grow, 
Paying more slavish tribute than they owe. 
By reprobate desire thus madly led, 300 

The Eoman lord marcheth to Lucrece' bed. 

The locks between her chamber and his will, 
Each one by him enforced, retires his ward ; 
But, as they open, they all rate his ill, 304 

Which drives the creeping thief to some regard ; 
The threshold grates the door to have him heard ; 

Night-wandering weasels shriek to see him 
there ; 

They fright him, yet he still pursues his fear. 

As each unwilling portal yields him way. 
Through little vents and crannies of the place 310 
The wind wars with his torch to make him stay, 
And blows the smoke of it into his face. 
Extinguishing his conduct in this case ; 
But his hot heart, which fond desire doth scorch, 
Puffs forth another wind that fires the torch ; 315 

And being lighted, by the light he spies 
Lucretia's glove, wherein her needle sticks; 
He takes it from the rushes where it lies. 
And griping it, the needle his finger pricks ; 319 
As who should say, ' This glove to wanton tricks 

Is not inured ; return again in haste ; 

Thou see'st our mistress' ornaments are chaste.' 

But all these poor forbiddings could not stay him; 
He in the worst sense construes their denial ; 
The doors, the wind, the glove, that did delay him, 
He takes for accidental things of trial ; 326 

Or as those bars which stop the hourly dial. 
Who with a lingering stay his course doth let, 
Till every minute pays the hour his debt. 

'So, so,' quoth he, 'these lets attend the time, 330 
Like little frosts that sometime threat the spring, 



Line 332-446.] 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



383 



To add a more rejoicing to the prime, 

And give the sneaped birds more cause to sing, 

Pain pays the income of each precious thing ; 

Huge rocks, high winds, strong pirates, shelves, 
and sands, 335 

The merchant fears, ere rich at home he lands.' 

Now is he come unto the chamber door. 
That shuts him from tlie heaven of his thought. 
Which with a yielding latch, and with no more, 
Hath barr'd him from the blessed thing he sought. 
So from himself impiety hath wrought, 341 

That for his prey to pray he doth begin. 
As if the heavens should countenance his sin. 

But in the midst of his unfruitful prayer, 
Having solicited the eternal power 345 

That his foul thoughts might compass his fair fair. 
And they would stand auspicious to the hour. 
Even there he starts : quoth he ' I must deflower ; 

The powers to whom I pray abhor this fact ; 

How can they then assist me in the act ? 350 

' Then Love and Fortune be my gods, my guide ! 

My will is back'd with resolution ; 

Thoughts are but dreams till their effects be tried ; 

The blackest sin is clear'd with absolution ; 354 

Against love's fire fear's frost hath dissolution. 
The eye of heaven is out, and misty night 
Covers the shame that follows sweet delight.' 

This said, his guilty hand pluck'd up the latch. 
And with his knee the door he opens wide. 
The dove sleeps fast that this night-owl will catch ; 
Thus treason works ere traitors be espied. 361 
Who sees the lurking serpent steps aside ; 
But she, sound sleeping, fearing no such thing, 
Lies at the mercy of his mortal sting. 

Into the chamber wickedly he stalks, 365 

And gazeth on her yet unstained bed. 
The curtains being close, about he walks, 
Boiling his greedy eyeballs in his head ; 
By their high treason is his heart misled ; 

Which gives the watch-word to his hand full 
soon 370 

To draw the cloud that hides the silver moon. 

Look, as the fair and fiery-pointed sun. 
Bushing from forth a cloud, bereaves our sight ; 
Even so, the curtain drawn, his eyes begun 
To wink, being blinded with a greater Ught; 
Whether it is that she refiects so bright, ,376 

That dazzleth them, or else some shame sup- 
posed ; 
But blind they are, and keep themselves en- 
closed. 

0, had they in that darksome prison died ! 
Then had they seen the ijeriod of their ill ; 380 
Then Collatine again, by Lucrece' side, 
In his clear bed might have reposed still ; 
But they must ope, this blessed league to kill ; 
And holy-thoughted Lucrece to their sight 
Must sell her joy, her life, her world's delight. 

Her lily hand her rosy cheek Ues under, 886 

Cozening the pillow of a lawful kiss ; 
Who, therefore angry, seems to part in sunder. 
Swelling on either side to want his bliss ; 
Between whose hills her head entombed is ; 390 



Where, like a virtuous monument, she lies, 
To be admired of lewd unhallowed eyes. 

Without the bed her other fair hand was. 
On the green coverlet ; whose perfect white 
Show'd like an April daisy on the grass, 395 

With pearly sweat, resembling dew of night. 
Her eyes, like marigolds, had sheathed their light, 
And canopied in darkness sweetly lay. 
Till they might open to adorn the day. 

Her hair, like golden threads, play'd with her 
breath ; 400 

modest wantons ! wanton modesty ! 

Showing life's triumph in the map of death; 

And death's dim look in life's mortality ; 

Each in her sleep themselves so beautify 404 

As if between them twain there were no strife, 
But that life lived in death and death in life. 

Her breasts, like ivory globes circled with blue, 
A pair of maiden worlds unconquered, 
Save of their lord no bearing yoke they knew. 
And him by oath they truly honoured. 410 

These worlds in Tarquin new ambition bred; 
Who, like a foul usurper, went about 
From this fair throne to heave the owner out. 

What could he see but mightily he noted ? 
What did he note but strongly he desired? 415 
What he beheld, on that he firmly doted. 
And in his will his wilful eye he tired. 
With more than admiration he admired 
Her azure veins, her alabaster skin, 419 

Her coral lips, her snow-white dimpled chin. 

As the grim lion fawneth o'er his prey. 
Sharp hunger by the conquest satisfied. 
So o'er this sleeping soul doth Tarquin stay, 
His rage of lust by gazing qualified ; 424 

Slack'd, not suppress'd ; for standing by her side. 
His eye, which late this mutiny restrains. 
Unto a greater uproar tempts his veins ; 

And they, like straggling slaves for pillage fight- 
ing, 
Obdurate vassals fell exploits effecting, 429 

In bloody death and ravishment delighting, 
Nor children's tears nor mothers' groans respect- 
ing, 
Swell in their pride, the onset still expecting ; 
Anon his beating heart, alarum striking. 
Gives the hot charge, and bids them do their 
liking. 

His drumming heart cheers up his burning eye. 
His eye commends the leading to his hand ; 436 
His hand, as proud of such a dignity, 
Smoking with pride, march'd on to make his stand 
On her bare breast, the heart of all her land ; 
Whose ranks of blue veins, as his hand did scale. 
Left their round turrets destitute and pale. 441 

They, mustering to the quiet cabinet 

Where their dear governess and lady lies, 

Do tell her she is dreadfully beset, 444 

And fright her with confusion of their cries; 

She, much amazed, breaks ope her lock'd-up eyes. 



384 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



[Line 447-560. 



Who, peeping forth this tumult to hehold, 
Are by his flaming torch dimm'd and controU'd. 

Imagine her as one in dead of night 449 

From forth dull sleep by dreadful fancy waking, 
That thinks she hath beheld some ghastly sprite, 
Whose grim aspect sets every joint a-shaking ; 
What terror 'tis, but she, in worser taking. 
From sleep disturbed, heedfully doth view 454 
The sight which makes supposed terror true. 

Wrapp'd and confounded in a thousand fears. 
Like to a new-kill'd bird she trembling lies ; 
She dares not look ; yet, winking, there appears 
Quick-shifting antics, ugly in her eyes ; 459 

Such shadows are .the weak brain's forgeries; 
Who, angry that the eyes fly from their lights. 
In darkness daunts them with more dreadful 
sights. 

His hand, that yet remains upon her breast, — 
Eude ram, to batter such an ivory wall I — 
May feel her heart, poor citizen ! distress'd, 465 
Wounding itself to death, rise up and fall. 
Beating her bulk, that his hand shakes withal. 
This moves in him more rage and lesser pity, 
To make the breach and enter this sweet city. 

First, like a trumpet, doth his tongue begin 470 
To sound a parley to his heartless foe ; 
Who o'er the white sheet peers her whiter chin. 
The reason of this rash alarm to know, 
Which he by dumb demeanour seeks to show ; 
But she with vehement prayers urgeth still 
Under what colour he commits this ill. 476 

Thus he replies : ' The colour in thy face, 
That even for anger makes the lily pale 
And the red rose blush at her own disgrace, 
Shall plead for me and tell my loving tale ; 480 
Under that colour am I come to scale 
Thy never-conquer'd fort ; the fault is thine, 
For those thine eyes betray thee unto mine. 

' Thus I forestall thee, if thou mean to chide: 
Thy beauty hath ensnared thee to this night, 485 
Where thou with patience must my will abide ; 
My will that marks thee for my earth's delight, 
Which I to conquer sought with all my might ; 
But as reproof and reason beat it dead, 
By thy bright beauty was it newly bred. 490 

' I see what crosses my attempt will bring ; 

I know what thorns the growing rose defends ; 

I think the honey guarded with a sting ; 

All this beforehand counsel comprehends ; 494 

But will is deaf and hears no heedful friends ; 
Only he hath an eye to gaze on beauty. 
And dotes on what he looks, 'gainst law or duty. 

' I have debated, even in my soul. 

What wrong, what shame, what sorrow I shall 

breed ; 
But nothing can affection's course control, 500 
Or stop the headlong fury of his speed. 
I know repentant tears ensue the deed, 

Eeproaeh, disdain, and deadly enmity ; 

Yet strive I to embrace mine infamy.' 



This said, he shakes aloft his Eoman blade, 505 
Which, like a falcon towering in the skies, 
Coucheth the fowl below with his wings' shade, 
Whose crooked beak threats if he mount he dies ; 
So under his insulting falchion lies 509 

Harmless Lucretia, marking what he tells 
With trembling fear, as fowl hear falcon's bells. 

' Lucrece,' quoth he, ' this night I must enjoy thee ; 
If thou deny, then force must work my way, 
For in thy bed I purpose to destroy thee ; 
That done, some worthless slave of thine I'll slay, 
To kill thine honour with thy life's decay ; 516 
And in thy dead arms do I mean to place him, 
Swearing I slew him, seeing thee embrace him. 

' So thy surviving husband shall remain 
The scornful mark of every open eye ; 520 

Thy kinsmen hang their heads at this disdain, 
Thy issue blurr'd with nameless bastardy ; 
And thou, the author of their obloquy, 
Shalt have thy trespass cited up in rhymes 
And sung by children in succeeding times. 

' But if thou yield, I rest thy secret friend ; 526 

The fault unknown is as a thought unacted; 

A little harm done to a great good end 

For lawful policy remains enacted. 

The poisonous simple sometime is compacted 

In a pure compound ; being so applied, 531 

His venom in effect is purified. 

' Then, for thy husband and thy children's sake, 
Tender my suit ; bequeath not to their lot 
The shame that from them no device can take, 
The blemish that will never be forgot ; 536 

Worse than a slavish wipe or birth-hour's blot ; 
For marks descried in men's nativity 
Are nature's faults, not their own infamy.' 

Here with a cockatrice' dead-killing eye 540 

He rouseth up himself, and makes a pause ; 
While she, the picture of true piety. 
Like a white hind under the gripe's sh^rp claws, 
Pleads, in a wilderness where are no laws. 
To the rough beast that knows no gentle right. 
Nor aught obeys but his foul appetite. 546 

But when a black-faced cloud the world doth 

threat, 
In his dim mist the aspiring mountains hiding. 
From earth's dark womb some gentle gust doth get, 
Which blows these pitchy vapours from their bid- 
ing, 550 
Hindering their present fall by this dividing ; 
So his unhallow'd haste her words delays. 
And moody Pluto winks while Orpheus plays. 

Yet, foul night-waking cat, he doth but dally. 
While in his hold-fast foot the weak mouse pant- 
eth ; 555 

Her sad behaviour feeds his vulture folly, 
A swallowing gulf that even in plenty wanteth ; 
His ear her prayers admits, but his heart granteth 
No penetrable entrance to her plaining; 
Tears harden lust, though marble wear with 
raining. 560. 



Line 561-679.] 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



385 



Her pity-pleading eyes are sadly fixed 
In the remorseless wrinkles of his face ; 
Her modest eloquence with sighs is mixed, 
Which to her oratory adds more grace. 
She puts the period often from his place, 565 

And midst the sentence so her accent hreaks 
That twice she doth begin ere once she speaks. 

She conjures him by high almighty Jove, 

By knighthood, gentry, and sweet friendship's 

oath, 
By her untimely tears, her husband's love, 570 
By holy human law and common troth. 
By heaven and earth, and all the power of both. 
That to his borrow'd bed he make retire. 
And stooj} to honour, not to foul desire. 

Quoth she, ' Reward not hospitality 575 

With such black payment as thou hast pretended ; 

Mud not the fountain that gave drink to thee ; 

Mar not the thing that cannot be amended; 

End thy ill aim before thy shoot be ended; 
He is no woodman that doth bend his bow 
To strike a poor unseasonable doe. 581 

' My husband is thy friend ; for his sake spare me ; 

Thyself art mighty ; for thine own sake leave me ; 

Myself a weakling ; do not then ensnare me; 

Thou look'st not like deceit ; do not deceive me. 

My sighs, like whirlwinds, labour hence to heave 

thee ; 586 

If ever man were moved with woman's moans. 

Be moved with my tears, my sighs, my groans ; 

'All which together, like a troubled ocean. 
Beat at thy rocky and wreck-threatening heart, 
To soften it with their continual motion ; 591 
For stones dissolved to water do convert. 
O, if no harder than a stone thou art. 

Melt at my tears, and be compassionate ! 

Soft pity enters at an iron gate. 595 

'In Tarquin's likeness I did entertain thee ; 
Hast thou put on his shape to do him shame ? 
To all the host of heaven I complain me. 
Thou wrong'st his honour, wound'st his princely 
name. 599 

Thou art not what thou seem'st; and if the same. 

Thou seem'st not what thou art, a god, a king ; 

For kings, like gods, should govern every thing. 

' How will thy shame be seeded in thine age. 
When thus thy vices bud before thy spring ! 
If in thy hope thou darcst do such outrage, 605 
What darest thou not when once thou art a king? 
O, be remember'd, no outrageous thing 

From vassal actors can be wiped away ; 

Then kings' misdeeds cannot be hid in clay. 

'This deed will make thee only loved for fear; 

But happy monarchs still are fear'd for love; 

With foul offenders thou perforce must bear, 612 

When they in thee the like oifences prove ; 

If but for fear of this, thy will remove ; 
For princes are the glass, the school, the book. 
Where subjects' eyes do learn, do read, do look. 

'And wilt thou be the school where Lust shall 
learn? 617 

Must he in thee read lectures of such shame ? 
Wilt thou be glass wherein it shall discern i 

25 



Authority for sin, warrant for blame, 020 

To privilege dishonour in thy name? 
Thou back'st reproach against long-living laud. 
And makest fair reputation but a bawd. 

'Hast thou command? by him that gave it thee. 
From a pure heart command thy rebel will ; 625 
Draw not thy sword to guard iniquity. 
For it was lent thee all that brood to kill. 
Thy princely office how canst thou fulfil. 
When, patteru'd by thy fault, foul sin may say 
He learn'd to sin and thou didst teach the way? 
'Think but how vile a spectacle it were, 631 

To view thy present trespass in another. 
Men's faults do seldom to themselves ajipear ; 
Their own transgressions partially they smother ; 
This guilt would seem death-worthy in thy bro- 
ther. 
0, how are they wrapp'd in with infamies 
That from their own misdeeds askance their 
eyes ! 637 

' To thee, to thee, my heaved-up hands appeal, 
Not to seducing lust, thy rash relier ; 
I sue for exiled majesty's repeal ; 640 

Let him return, and flattering thoughts retire ; 
His true respect will prison false desire, , 
And wipe the dim mist from thy doting eyne. 
That thou shalt see thy state and pity mine.' 

'Have done,' quoth he; 'my uncontrolled tide 
Turns not, but swells the higher by this let. 6-16 
Small lights are soon blown out, huge fires abide. 
And with the wind in greater fury fret ; 
The petty streams that pay a daily debt 

To their salt sovereign, with their fresh falls' 
haste 650 

Add to his flow, hut alter not his taste.' 

' Thou art,' quoth she, ' a sea, a sovereign king 
And, lo, there falls into thy boundless flood 
Black lust, dishonour, shame, misgoverning, 
Who seek to stain the ocean of thy blood. 655 
If all these petty ills shall change thy good. 
Thy sea within a puddle's womb is hearsed, 
And not the puddle in thy sea dispersed. 

' So shall these slaves be king, and thou their slave ; 

Thou nobly base, they basely dignified ; 660 

Thou their fair life, and they thy fouler grave ; 

Thou loathed in their shame, they in thy pride ; 

The lesser thing should not the greater hide ; 
The cedar stoops not to the base shrub's foot. 
But low shrubs wither at the cedar's root. 665 

' So let thy thoughts, low vassals to thy state' — 
' No more,' quoth he ; ' by heaven, I will not hear 

thee ; 
Yield to my love ; if not, enforced hate. 
Instead of love's coy touch, shall rudely tear thee ; 
That done, despitefully I mean to bear thee 670 
Unto the base bed of some rascal groom. 
To be thy partner in this shameful doom.' 

This said, he sets his foot upon the light. 
For light and lust are deadly enemies ; 
Shame folded up in blind concealing night, 675 
When most unseen, then most doth tyrannize. 
The wolf hath seized his prey, the poor lamb cries ; 

Till with her own white fleece her voice con- 
troll'd 

Entombs her outcry in her lips' sweet fold ; 



886 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



[Line 680-79S. 



For with the nightly linen that she wears 680 
He pens her piteous clamours in her head, 
Cooling his hot face in the chastest tears 
That ever modest eyes with sorrow shed. 
O, that prone lust should stain so pure a bed ! 
The spots whereof could weeping purify, 685 
Her tears should drop on them perpetually. 

But she hath lost a dearer thing than life, 

And he hath won what he would lose again ; 

This forced league doth force a further strife ; 

This momentary joy breeds months of pain ; 

This hot desire converts to cold disdain ; 690 

Pure Chastity is rifled of her store. 
And Lust, the thief, far poorer than before. 

Loot, as the full-fed hound or gorged hawk 
Unapt for tender smell or speedy flight, 695 

Make slow pursuit, or altogether balk 
The prey wherein by nature they delight. 
So surfeit-taking Tarquin fares this night: 
His taste delicious, in digestion souring, 699 
Devours his will, that lived by foul devouring. 

.0, deeper sin than bottomless conceit 

Can comprehend in still imagination ! 

Drunken Desire must vomit his receipt. 

Ere he can see his own abomination. 

While Lust is in his pride, no exclamation 705 
Can curb his heat or rein his rash desire. 
Till, like a jade. Self-will himself doth tire. 

And then with lank and lean discolour'd cheek. 
With heavy eye, knit brow, and strengthless pace. 
Feeble Desire, all recreant, poor, and meek, 710 
Like to a bankrupt beggar wails his case : 
The flesh being proud. Desire doth fight with 
Grace, 
For there it revels, and when that decays 
The guilty rebel for remission prays. 

So, fares it with this faultful lord of Rome, 715 
Who this accomplishment so hotly chased ; 
For now against himself he sounds this doom, 
That through the length of times he stands dis- 



Besides, his soul's fair temple is defaced, 719 

To whose weak ruins muster troops of cares, 
To ask the spotted princess how she fares. 

She says, her subjects with foul insurrection 
Have batter'd down her consecrated wall. 
And by their mortal fault brought in subjection 
Her immortality, and made her thrall 725 

To living death and pain perpetual ; 
Which in her prescience she controlled still. 
But her foresight could not forestall their will. 

Even in this thought through the dark night he 

stealeth, 
A captive victor that hath lost in gain ; 730 

Bearing away the wound that nothing healeth. 
The scar that will, despite of cure, remain ; 
Leaving his spoil perplex'd in greater pain. 
She bears the load of lust he left behind. 
And he the burthen of a guilty mind. 7.35 

He like a thievish dog creeps sadly thence ; 
She like a wearied lamb lies panting there ; 
He scowls, and hates himself for his offence ; 
She, desperate, with her nails her flesh doth tear; 
He faintly flies, sweating with guilty fear ; 7-10 



She stays, exclaiming on the direful night ; 
He runs, and chides his vanish'd, loathed de- 
light. 

He thence departs a heavy convertite ; 
She there remains a hopeless cast-away ; 
He in his speed looks for the morning light ; 745 
She prays she never may behold the day, 
' For day,' quoth she, ' night's 'scapes doth open 
lay, 
And my true eyes have never practiced how 
To cloak offences with a cunning brow. 

' They think not but that every eye can see 750 
The same disgrace which they themselves behold ; 
And therefore would they still in darkness be. 
To have their unseen sin remain untold ; 
For they their guilt with weeping will unfold, 
And grave, like water that doth eat in steel. 
Upon my cheeks what helpless shame I feel.' 

Here she exclaims against repose and rest, 757 
And bids her eyes hereafter still be blind. 
She wakes her heart by beating on her breast. 
And bids it leap from thence, where it may find 
Some purer chest to close so pure a mind. 761 

Frantic with grief thus breathes she forth her 
spite 

Against the unseen secrecy of night : 

' comfort-killing Night, image of hell ! 

Dim register and notary of shame! 765 

Black stage for tragedies and murders fell ! 

Vast sin-concealing chaos ! nurse of blame ! 

Blind, muffled bawd ! dark harbour for defame ! 
Grim cave of death ! whispering conspirator 
With close-tongued treason and the ravisher ! 

' hateful, vaporous, and foggy Night ! 771 

Since thou art guilty of my cureless crime. 
Muster thy mists to meet the eastern light, 
Make war against proportion'd course of time ; 
Or if thou wilt permit the sun to climb 775 

His wonted height, yet ere he go to bed. 
Knit poisonous clouds about his golden head. 

'With rotten damps ravish the morning air; 
Let their exhaled unwholesome breaths make sick 
The life of purity, the supreme fair, 780 

Ere he arrive his weary noon-tide prick ; 
And let thy misty vapours march so thick 
That in their smoky ranks his smother'd light 
May set at noon and make perpetual night ! 

'Were Tarquin Night, as he is but Night's child, 
The silver-shining queen he would distain; 786 
Her twinkling handmaids too, by him defiled. 
Through Night's black bosom should not peep 

again ; 
So should I have co-partners in my pain ; 789 
And fellowship in woe doth woe assuage. 
As palmers' chat makes short their pilgrimage. 

' Where now T have no one to blush with me, 
To cross their arms and hang their heads with. 

mine. 
To mask their brows and hide their infamy ; 
But I alone alone must sit and pine, 795 

Seasoning the earth with showers of silver brine. 
Mingling my talk with tears, my grief with 

groans. 
Poor wasting monuments of lasting moans. 



Line 799-9IS-] 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



387 



' O Night, thou furnace of foul-reeking smoke, 
Let not the jealous Day behold that face 800 

Which underneath thy black all-hiding cloak 
Immodestly lies martyr'd with disgrace ! 
Keep still possession of thy glooniy place, 
That all the faults which in thy reigu are made 
May likewise be sepulchred in thy shade! 805 

'Make me not object to the tell-tale Day ! 

The light will show, character'd in my brow, 

The story of sweet chastity's decay. 

The impious breach of holy wedlock vow ; 

Yea, the illiterate, that know not how 810 

To cipher what is writ in learned books, 
Will quote my loatlisome trespass in my looks. 

' The nurse, to still her child, will tell my story, 
And fright her crying babe with Tarquin's name ; 
The orator, to deck his oratory, 815 

Will couple my reproach to Tarquin's shame ; 
Feast-finding minstrels, tuning my defame, 
Will tie the hearers to attend each line, 
How Tarquin wronged me, I Collatine. 

' Let my good name, that senseless reputation. 
For Collatine's dear love be kept unspotted; 821 
If that be made a theme for disputation, 
The branches of another root are rotted. 
And undeserved reproach to him allotted 
That is as clear from this attaint of mine 
As I, ere this, was pure to Collatine. 826 

' unseen shame ! invisible disgrace ! 
O unfelt sore ! crest-wounding, private sear ! 
Beproach is stamp'd in Collatiuus' face. 
And Tarquin's eye may read the mot afar, 830 
How he in peace is wounded, not in war. 
Alas, how many bear such shameful blows. 
Which not themselves, but he that gives them 
knows ! 

' If, Collatine, thine honour lay in me. 
From me by strong assault it is bereft. 835 

My honey lost, and I, a drone-like bee. 
Have no perfection of my summer left. 
But robb'd and ransaek'd by injurious theft ; 
In thy weak hive a wandering wasp hath crept, 
And suck'd the honey which thy chaste bee 
kept. 840 

'Yet am I guilty of thy honour's wrack ; 

Yet for thy honour did I entertain him ; 

Coming from thee, I could not put him back. 

For it had been dishonour to disdain him ; 

Besides, of weariness he did complain him, 845 
And talk'd of virtue : O unlook'd-for evil. 
When virtue is profaned in such a devil ! 

'Why should the worm intrude the maiden bud? 

Or hateful cuckoos hatch in sparrows' nests? 

Or toads infect fair founts with venom mud ? 

Or tyrant folly lurk in gentle breasts ? 851 

Or kings be breakers of their own behests? 
But no perfection is so absolute 
That some impurity doth not pollute. 

' The aged man that coffers up his gold 855 

Is plagued with cramps and gouts and painful fits, 
And scarce bath eyes his treasure to behold, 



But like still-pining Tantalus he sits 
And useless barns the harvest of his wits. 
Having no other pleasure of his gain SGO 

But torment that it cannot cure his pain. 

' So then he hath it when he cannot use it. 
And leaves it to be master'd by his young; 
Who in their pride do presently abuse it ; 
Their father was too weak, and they too strong. 
To hold their cursed-blessed fortune long. 833 
The sweets we wish for turn to loathed sours 
Even in the moment that we call them ours. 

' Unruly blasts wait on the tender spring ; 
Unwholesome weeds take root with precious flow- 
ers ; 870 
The adder hisses where the sweet birds sing ; 
What virtue breeds iniquity devours ; 
We have no good that we can say is ours 

But ill-annexed Opportunity 

Or kills his life or else his quality. 875 

' Opportunity, thy guilt is great ! 

'Tis thou that execufest the traitor's treason ; 

Thou set'st the wolf where he the lamb may get ; 

Whoever plots the sin, thou point'st the season ; 

'Tis thou that spurn'st at right, at law, at reason ; 
And in thy shady cell, where none may spy him. 
Sits Sin, to seize the souls that wander by him. 

' Thou makest the vestal violate her oath ; 883 
Thou blow'st the fire when temperance is thaw'd ; 
Thou smother'st honesty, thou murder'st troth ; 
Thou foul abettor ! thou notorious bawd ! 8Si5 
Thou plantest scandal and displacest laud ; 
Thou ravisher, thou traitor, thou false thief. 
Thy honey turns to gall, thy joy to grief! 

' Thy secret pleasure turns to open, shame, 890 
Thy private feasting to a public fast, 
Thy smoothing titles to a ragged name, 
Thy sugar'd tongue to bitter wormwood taste ; 
Thy violent vanities can never last. 
How comes it then, vile Opportunity, S95 

Being so bad, such numbers seek for thee ? 

' When wilt thou be the humble suppliant's friend. 
And bring him where his suit may be obtained? 
When wilt thou sort an hour great strifes to end ? 
Or free that soul which wretchedness hath 
chained? 900 

Give physic to the sick, ease to the pained ? 
The poor, lame, bUnd, halt, creep, cry out for 

thee; 
But they ne'er meet with Opportunity. 

'The patient dies while the physician sleeps; 

The orphan pines while the oppressor feeds ; 

Justice is feasting while the widow weeps ; 906 

Advice is sporting while infection breeds ; 

Thou grant'st no time for charitable deeds ; 
Wrath, envy, treason, rape, and murder's rages. 
Thy heinous hours wait on them as their pages. 

' When Truth and Virtue have to do with thee, 
A thousand crosses keep them from thy aid ; 912 
They buy thy help, but Sin ne'er gives a fee ; 
He gratis comes, and thou art well appaid 
As well to hear as grant what he hath said. 



388 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



[Line 916-1032. 



My CoUatine would else have come to me 916 
When Tarquin did, but he was stay'd by thee. 

' Guilty thou art of murder and of theft, 

Guilty of perjury and subornation. 

Guilty of treason, forgery, and shift, 920 

Guilty of incest, that abomination ; 

An accessory by thine inclination 
To all sins past and all that are to come, 
From the creation to the general doom. 

' Mis-shapen Time, copesmate of ugly Night, 
Swift subtle post, carrier of grisly care, 926 

Eater of youth, false slave to false delight, 
Base watch of woes, sin's pack-horse, virtue's 

snare ; 
Thou nursest all and murder'st all that are; 
0, hear me then, injurious shifting time! 930 
Be guilty of my death, since of my crime. 

' Why hath thy servant Opportunity 

Betray'd the hours thou gavest me to repose, 
Cancell'd my fortunes, and enchained me 
To endless date of never-ending woes? 935 

Time's office is to fine the hate of foes. 
To eat up errors by opinion bred, 
Not spend the dowry of a lawful bed. 

'Time's glory is to calm contending kings. 
To unmask falsehood and bring truth to light. 
To stamp the seal of time in aged things, 941 
To wake the morn and sentinel the night. 
To wrong the wronger till he render right. 
To ruinate proud buildings with thy hours. 
And smear with dust their glittering golden 
towers ; 94.5 

' To fill with worm-holes stately monuments. 
To feed oblivion with decay of things, 
To blot old books and alter their contents, 
To pluck the quills from ancient ravens' wings. 
To dry the old oak's sap and cherish springs. 
To spoil antiquities of hanimer'd steel, 9.51 

And turn the giddy round of Fortune's wheel ; 

' To show the beldam daughters of her daughter. 
To make the child a man, the man a child. 
To slay the tiger that doth live by slaughter. 
To tame the unicorn and lion wild, 956 

To mock the subtle in themselves beguiled, 
To cheer the ploughman with increaseful crops. 
And waste huge stones with little water-drops. 

'Why work'st thou mischief in thy pilgrimage. 
Unless thou couldst return to make amends? 
One poor retiring minute in an age 962 

Would purchase thee a thousand thousand friends. 
Lending him wit that to bad debtors lends ; 

O, this dread \iight, wouldst thou one hour come 
back, 965 

I could prevent this storm and shun thy wrack ! 

' Thou ceaseless lackey to eternity. 

With some mischance cross Tarquin in his ilight ; 

Devise extremes beyond extremity, 969 

To make him curse this cursed crimeful night; 

Let ghastly shadows his lewd eyes affright. 
And the dire thought of his committed evil 
Shape every bush a hideous shapeless devil. 



' Disturb his hours of rest with restless trances. 
Afflict liim in his bed with bedrid groans ; 975 
Let there bechance him pitiful mischances. 
To make him moan ; but pity not his moans ; 
Stone him with harden'd hearts, harder than 
stones ; 
And let mild women to him lose their mildness, 
Wilder to him than tigers in their wildness. 

' Let him have time to tear his curled hair, 981 
Let him have time against himself to rave. 
Let him have time of time's help to despair, 
Let him have time to live a loathed slave. 
Let him have time a beggar's orts to crave, 985 
And time to see one that by alms doth live 
Disdain to him disdained scraps to give. 

' Let him have time to see his friends his foes. 
And merry fools to mock at him resort ; 989 

Let him have time to mark how slow time goes 
In time of sorrow, and how swift and short 
His time of folly and his time of sport ; 
And ever let his unrecalling crime 
Have time to wail the abusing of his time. 

' Time, thou tutor both to good and bad, 995 
Teach me to curse him that thou taught'st this ill ' 
At his own shadow let the thief run mad. 
Himself himself seek every hour to kill ! 
Such wretched hands such wretched blood should 
spill ; 
For who so base would such an office have 1000 
As slanderous deathsman to so base a slave ? 

' The baser is he, coming from a king. 
To shame his hope with deeds degenerate ; 
The mightier man, the mightier is the thing 
That makes him honour'd or begets him hate; 
For greatest scandal waits on greatest state. 1006 
The moon being clouded presently is miss'd, 
But little stars may hide them when they list. 

'The crow may bathe his coal-black wings in mire, 
And unperceived fly with the filth away ; 1010 
But if the like the snow-white swan desire, 
The stain upon his silver down will stay. 
Poor grooms are sightless night, kings glorious 
day; 
Gnats are unnoted wheresoe'er they fly. 
But eagles gazed upon with every eye. 1015 

'Out, idle words, servants to shallow fools! 

Unprofitable sounds, weak arbitrators ! 

Busy yourselves in skill-contending schools ; 

Debate where leisure serves with dull debaters; 

To trembling clients be you mediators ; 1020 

For me, I force not argument a straw. 
Since that my case is i)ast the help of law. 

' In vain I rail at Opportunity, 

At Time, at Tarquin, and uncheerful Night ; 

In vain I cavil with mine infamy, 1025 

In vain I spurn at my confirm'd despite; 

This helpless smoke of words doth me no right. 
The remedy indeed to do me good 
Is to let forth my foul-defiled blood. 

'Poor hand, why quiver'st thou at this decree? 

Honour thj^self to rid me of this shame ; 

For if I die, my honour lives in thee, _ 1032 



Line 1033-1146.] 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



389 



But if I live, thou livest in my defame ; 

Since thou couldst not defend thy loyal dame, 
And wast afeard to scratch her wicked foe, 
Kill both thyself and her for yielding so.' 1036 

This said, from her be-tumbled couch she starteth, 
To find some desperate instrument of death ; 
But this no slaughterhouse uo tool imparteth 
To make more vent for passage of her breath ; 1040 
Which thronging through her lips, so vanisheth 
As smoke from jEtna that in air consumes. 
Or that which from discharged cannon fumes. 

' In vain,' quoth she, ' I live, and seek in vain 
Some happy mean to end a hapless life. 1045 

I fear'd by Tarquin's falchion to be siain. 
Yet for the self-same purpose seek a knife; 
But when I fear'd I was a loyal wife ; 
So am I now ; no, that cannot be ; 1049 

Of that true type hath Tarquin rifled me. 

' O, that is gone for which I sought to live, 

And therefore now I need not fear to die. 

To clear this spot by death, at least I give 

A badge of fame to slander's livery, 

A dying life to living infamy ; 1055 

Poor helpless help, the treasure stol'n away. 
To burn the guiltless casket where it lay ! 

'Well, well, dear Collatine, thou shalt not know 

The stained taste of violated troth ; 

I will not wrong thy true affection so, 1060 

To flatter thee with an infringed oath ; 

This bastard graff shall never come to growth ; 
He shall not boast who did thy stock pollute 
That thou art doting father of his fruit. 1064 

' Nor shall he smile at thee in secret thought, 
Kor laugh with his companions at thy state ; 
But thou shalt know thy interest was not bought 
Basely with gold, but stol'n from forth thy gate. 
For me, I am the mistress of mj' fate, 1069 

And with my trespass never will dispense, 
Till life to death acquit my forced offence. 

' I will not poison thee with my attaint. 
Nor fold my fault in cleanly-coin'd excuses ; 
My sable ground of sin I will not paint, 1074 

To hide the truth of this false night's abuses ; 
My tongue shall utter all ; mine eyes, like sluices. 
As from a mountain-spring that feeds a dale, 
Shall gush pure streams to purge my impure 
tale.' 

By this, lamenting Philomel had ended 1079 

The well tuned warble of her nightly sorrow. 
And solemn night with slow-sad gait descended 
To ugly hell ; when, lo, the blushing morrow 
Lends light to all fair eyes that light will borrow; 
But cloudy Lucrece shames herself to see, 
And therefore still in night would cloister'd be. 

Revealing day through every cranny spies, 10S6 
And seems to point her out where she sits weep- 
ing; 
To whom she sobbing speaks : ' eye of eyes, 
Why pry'st thou through my window? leave thy 

peeping ; 
Mock with thy tickling beams eyes that are sleep- 
ing ; 1090 



Brand not my forehead with thy piercing light, 
For day hath nought to do what's done by night.' 

Thus cavils she with every thine slip pees ; 

True grief is fond and testy as a child, 1094 

Who wayward once, his mood with nought agrees ; 

Old woes, not infant sorrows, bear them mild ; 

Continuance tames the one; the other wild. 
Like an unpractised swimmer plunging still 
With too much labour drowns for want of skill 

So she, deep-drenched in a sea of care, 1100 

Holds disputation with each thing she views, 
And to herself all sorrow doth compare ; 
No object but her passion's strength renews. 
And as one shifts, another straight ensues; 1104 

Sometime her grief is dumb and hath no words; 

Sometime 'tis mad aud too much talk aflords. 

The little birds that tune their morning's joy 
Make her moans mad with their sweet melod}^ ; 
For mirth doth search the bottom of annoy ; 
Sad souls are slain in merry company; 1110 

Grief best is pleased with grief's society; 
True sorrow theu is feelingly sufiiced 
When with like semblance it is sympathized. 

'Tis double death to drown in ken of shore; 1114 
He ten times pines that pines beholding food; 
To see the salve doth make the wound ache more ; 
Great grief grieves most at that would do it good ; 
Deep woes roll forward like a gentle flood, 

AVho, being stopp'd, the bounding banks o'er- 
flows; 1119 

Grief dallied with nor law nor limit knows. 

'You mocking birds,' quoth she, '3'our tunes en- 
tomb 
Within your hollow-swelling feather'd breasts. 
And in my hearing be you mute and dumb ; 
My restless discord loves no stops nor rests ; 
A woeful hostess brooks not merry guests ; 1125 
Relish your nimble notes to pleasing ears; 
Distress likes dumps when time is kept with 
tears. 

' Come, Philomel, that sing'st of ravishment, 
iSIake th}'^ sad grove in my dishevell'd hair ; 
As the dank earth weeps at thy languishment. 
So I at each sad strain will strain a tear, 1131 
And with deep groans the diapason bear ; 
For burden-wise Pll hum on Tarquin still. 
While thou on Tereus descant'st better skill. 

' And whiles against a thorn thou hear'st thy part, 
To keep thy sharp woes waking, wretched I, 
To imitate thee well, against my heart 1137 

Will fix a sharp knife, to affright mine eye; 
Who, if it wink, shall thereon fall and die. 
These means, as frets upon an instrument, 
Shall tune our heart-strings to true languish- 
ment. 1141 

'And for, poor bird, thou sing'st not in the day, 
As shaming any eye should thee behold. 
Some dark deep desert, seated from the way. 
That knows not parching heat nor freezing cold, 
Will we find out; and there we will unfold 



390 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



[Line i 147-1263. 



To creatures stern sad tunes, to change their 
kinds; 1147 

Since men prove beasts, let beasts bear gentle 
minds.' 

As the poor frighted deer, that stands at gaze, 
Wildly determining which way to fly, 1150 

Or one encompass'd with a winding maze, 
That cannot tread the way out readily ; 
So with herself is she in mutiny. 
To live or die, which of the twain were better, 
AVlien life is shamed and death reproach's 
debtor. 1155 

' To kill myself,' quoth she, ' alack, what were it, 
But with my body my poor soul's pollution ? 
They that lose half with greater patience bear it 
Than they whose whole is swallow'd in confusion. 
That mother tries a merciless conclusion 1160 

Who, having two sweet babes, when death takes 
one. 

Will slay the other and be nurse to none. 

' My body or my soul, which was the dearer. 
When the one pure, the other made divine? 
AVhose love of either to myself was nearer, 1165 
When both were kept for heaven and CoUatine? 
Ay me ! the bark peel'd from the lofty pine, 

His leaves will wither and his sap decay ; 

So must my soul, her bark being peel'd away. 

' Her house is sack'd, her quiet interrupted, 
Her mansion battered by the enemy ; 1171 

Her sacred temple spotted, spoil'd, corrupted, 
Grossly engirt with daring infamy ; 
Then let it not be call'd impiety. 
If in this blemish'd fort I make some hole 
Through wliich I may convey this troubled soul. 

' Yet die I will not till my Collatine 1177 

Have heard the cause of my untimely death ; 
That he may vow, in that sad hour of mine, 
Revenge on him that made me stop my breath. 
My stained blood to Tarquin I'll bequeath, 1181 
Which by him tainted shall for him be spent, 
And as his due writ in my testament. 

' My honour I'll bequeath unto the knife 

That wounds my body so dishonoured. 1185 

'Tis honour to deprive dishonour'd life; 

The one will live, the other being dead ; 

So of shame's ashes shall my fame be bred ; 

For in my death I murder shameful scorn ; 

My shame so dead, mine honour is new-born. 

' Dear lord of that dear jewel I have lost, 1191 
What legacy shall I bequeath to thee ? 
My resolution, love, shall be thy boast. 
By whose example thou revenged mayst be. 
How Tarquin must be used, read it in me; 1195 
Myself, thy friend, will kill myself, thy foe, 
And, for my sake, serve thou false Tarquin so. 

'This brief abridgement of my will I make: 
My soul and body to the $kies and ground ; 
My resolution, husband, do thou take ; 1200 

Mine honour be the knife's that makes my wound ; 
My shame be his that did my fame confound ; 
And all my fame that lives disbursed be 
To those that live and thiuk no shame of me. 



' Thou, Collatine, shalt oversee this will ; 1205 
How was I overseen that thou shalt see it '. 
My blood shall wash the slander of mine ill; 
My life's foul deed, my life's fair end shall free it. 
Faint not, faint heart, but stoutly say "So be it;" 

Yield to my hand ; my hand shall conquer thee ; 

Thou dead, both die and both shall victors be.' 

This plot of death when sadly she had laid, 1212 
And wiped the brinish pearl froiu her bright eyes, 
With untuned tongue she hoarsely calls her maid, 
Whose swift obedience to her mistress hies ; 
For fleet-wing'd duty with thought's feathers flies. 
Poor Lucrece' cheeks unto her maid seem so 
As winter meads when sun doth melt their snow. 

Her mistress she doth give demure good-morrow, 
With soft slow tongue, true mark of modesty. 
And sorts a sad look to her lady's sorrow, 1221 
For why her face wore sorrow's livery, 
But durst not ask of her audaciously 
Why her two suns were cloud-eclipsed so, 1224 
Nor why her fair cheeks over-wash'd with woe. 

But as the earth doth weep, the sun being set. 
Each flower moisten'd like a melting eye. 
Even so the maid with swelling drops 'gan wet 
Her circled eyne, enforced by sympathy 
Of those fair suns set in her mistress' sky, 1230 
Who in a salt-waved ocean quench their light. 
Which makes the maid weep like the dewy 
night. 

A pretty while these pretty creatures stand, 
Like ivory conduits coral cisterns filling ; 1234 
One justly weeps ; the other takes in hand 
No cause, but company, of her drops spilling; 
Their gentle sex to weep are often willing. 
Grieving themselves to guess at others' smarts, 
And then they drown their eyes or break their 
hearts. 1239 

For men.have mai'ble, women waxen, minds. 

And therefore are they form'd as marble will ; 

The weak oppress'd, the impression of strange 
kinds 

Is form'd in them by force, by fraud, or skill ; 

Then call them not the authors of their ill, 1244 
No more than wax shall be accotinted evil 
Wherein is stamp'd the semblance of a devil. 

Their smoothness, like a goodly champaign plain, 
Lays open all the little worms that creep ; 
In men, as in a rough-grown grove, remain 
Cave-keeping evils that obscurely sleep; 1250 
Through crystal walls each little mote will peep; 

Though men can cover crimes with bold stern 
looks. 

Poor women's faces are their own faults' books. 

No man inveigh against the wither'd flower. 
But chide rough winter that the flower hath kill'd ; 
Not that devour'd, but that which doth devour. 
Is worthy of blame. O, let it not be hild 1257 
Poor women's faults, that they are so fulfill'd 
With men's abuses ; those proud lords to blame 
Make weak-made women tenants to their shame. 

The precedent whereof in Lucrece view, 1261 
Assail'd by night with circumstances strong 
Of present death, and shame that might ensue 



Line 1264-1372.] 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



391 



By that her death, to do her husband wrong ; 
Such danger to resistance did belong, 1265 

That dying fear through all her body spread ; 

And who cannot abuse a body dead? 

By this, mild patience bid fair Lucrece speak 
To the poor counterfeit of her complaining; 
'My girl,' quoth she, 'on what occasion bi'eak 
Those tears from thee, that down thy cheeks are 
raining? 1271 

If thou dost weep for grief of my sustaining. 

Know, gentle wench, it small avails my mood ; 

If tears could help, mine own would do me good. 

'But tell me, girl, when went' — and there she 
stay'd 1275 

Till after a deep groan — ' Tarquin from hence ?' 
'Madam, ere I was up,' replied the maid, 
'The more to blame my sluggard negligence; 
Yet with the fault I thus far can dispense ; 
Myself was stirring ere the break of day, 1280 
And ere I rose was Tarquin gone away. 

' But, lady, if your maid may be so bold, 
She would request to know your heaviness.' 
'0, peace!' quoth Lucrece; 'if it should be told. 
The repetition cannot make it less, 1285 

For more it is than I can well express ; 
And that deep torture may be call'd a hell 
When more is felt than one hath power to tell. 

Go, get ine hither paper, ink, and pen ; 1289 

Yet save that labour, for I have them here. 
What should I saj' ? One of my husband's men 
Bid thou be ready by and by to bear 
A letter to my lord, my love, my dear; 
Bid him with speed prepare to carry it; 1294 
The cause craves haste and it will soon be writ.' 

Her maid is gone, and she prepares to write, 

First hovering o'er the paper with her quill ; 

Conceit and grief an eager combat fight ; 

What wit sets down is blotted straight with will ; 

This is too curious-good, this blunt and ill ; 1300 
Much like a press of people at a door, 
Throng her inventions, which shall go before. 

At last she thus begins : ' Thou worthy lord 
Of that unworthy wife that greeteth thee. 
Health to thy person ! next vouchsafe t' afford, — 
If ever, love, thy Lucrece thou wilt see,— 1B06 
Some present speed to come and visit me. 

So, I commend me from our house in grief ; 
' My woes are tedious, though my words are 
brief.' 

Here folds she up the tenour of her woe, 1310 
I Her certain sorrow writ uncertainly. 
By this short schedule Collatine may know 
Her grief, but not her grief's true quality ; 
She dares not thereof make discovery, 1314 

Lest he should hold it her own gross abuse, 
Ere she with blood had stain'd her stain'd ex- 
cuse. 

Besides, the life and feeling of her passion 
She hoards, to spend when he is by to hear her. 
When sighs and groans and tears may grace the 
fashion 



Of her disgrace, the better so to clear her 1320 

From that suspicion which the world might' bear 

her. 

To shun this blot, she would not blot the letter 

With words, till action might become them 

better. 

To see sad sights moves more than hear them told ; 
For then the eye interprets to the ear 1.325 

The heavy motion that it doth behold. 
When every part a part of woe doth bear. 
'Tis but a part of sorrow that we hear ; 
Deep sounds make lesser noise than shallow 

fords. 
And sorrow ebbs, being blown With wind of 
words. 1330 

Her letter now is seal'd and on it writ 
'At Ardea to my lord with more than haste.' 
The post attends, and she delivers it, 
Charging the sour-faced groom to hie as fast 
As lagging fowls before the northern blast ; 

Speed more than speed but dull and slow she 
deems ; 1336 

Extremity still urgetli such extremes. 

The homely villain court'sies to her low, 
And blushing on her, with a steadfast eye 
Receives the scroll without or yea or no, 1340 
And forth with bashful innocence doth hie. 
But they whose guilt within their bosoms lie 

Imagine every eye beholds their blame ; 

For Lucrece thought he blush'd to see her 
shame ; 

When, silly groom ! God wot, it was defect 
Of spirit, life and bold audacity. 1346 

Such harmless creatures have a true respect 
To talk in deeds, while others saucily 
Promise more speed but do it leisurely ; 1349 

Even so this pattern of the worn-out age 
Pawn'd honest looks, but laid no words to gage. 

His kindled duty kindled her mistrust. 
That two red iires in both their faces blazed ; 
She thought he blush'd, as knowing Tarquiu's lust. 
And blushing with him, wistly on him gazed ; 1355 
Her earnest eye did make him more amazed ; 
The more she saw the blood his cheeks replenish, 
The more she thought he spied in her some 
blemish^ 

But long she thinks till he return again, 
And yet the duteous vassal scarce is gone. 
The weary time she cannot entertain, 1361 

For now 'tis stale to sigh, to weep and groan ; 
So woe hath wearied woe, moan tired moan. 
That she her plaints a little while doth stay, 
Pausing for means to mourn some newer way. 

At last she calls to mind where hangs a piece 
Of skilful painting, made for Priam's Troy ; 
Before the which is drawn the power of Greece, 
For Helen's rape the city to destroy, 1369 

Threatening cloud-kissing Ilion with annoy; 
Which the conceited painter drew so proud, 
As heaven, it seem'd, to kiss the turrets bow'd 



392 



THE RAPE OE LUCRECE 



[Line 1373-1491. 



A thousand lamentable objects there, 
In scorn of nature, art gave lifeless life ; 
Many a dry drop seem'd a weeping tear, 1375 
Shed for the slaughter'd husband by the wife ; 
The red blood reek'd, to show the painter's strife ; 
And dying eyes gleam'd forth their ashy lights. 
Like dying coals burnt out in tedious nights. 

There might you see the labouring pioner 1380 
Begrimed with sweat and smeared all with dust ; 
And from the towers of Troy there would appear 
The very eyes of men through loop-holes thrust. 
Gazing upon the Greeks with little lust ; 1384 
Such sweet observance in this work was had 
That one might see those far-off eyes look sad. 

In great commanders grace and majesty 
You might behold, triumphing in their faces; 
In youth, quick bearing and dexterity ; 
And here and there the painter interlaces 1390 
Pale cowards, marching on with trembling paces, 
Which heartless peasants did so well resemble 
That one would swear he saw them quake and 
tremble. 

In Ajax and Ulysses, 0, what art 

Of physiognomy might one behold! 1395 

The face of eitlier cipher'd cither's heart; 

Their face their manners most expressly told; 

lu Ajax' eyes blunt rage and rigour roU'd ; 
But the mild glance that sly Ulysses lent 1399 
Show'd deep regard and smiling government. 

There pleading might you see grave Nestor stand. 
As 'twere encouraging the Greeks to fight, 
Making such sober action with his hand 1403 
That it beguiled attention, charm'd the sight; 
In speech, it seem'd, his beard all silver white 
Wagg'd up and down, and from his lips did fly 
Thin winding breath which purl'd up to the sky. 

About him were a press of gaping faces, 
Which seem'd to swallow up his sound advice ; 
All jointly listening, but with several graces. 
As if some mermaid did tlieir ears entice, 1411 
Some high, some low, the painter was so nice ; 
The scalps of many, almost hid behind. 
To jump up higher seem'd, to mock the mind. 

Here one man's hand lean'd on another's head. 

His nose being shadow'd by his neighbour's ear-; 

Here one being throng'd bears back, all boli'n 
and red; 1417 

Another smother'd seems to pelt and swear ; 

And in their rage such signs of rage they bear 
As, but for loss of Nestor's golden words, 
It seem'd they would debate with angry swords. 

For much imaginary work was there ; 1422 

Conceit deceitful, so compact, so kind. 
That for Achilles' image stood his spear 
Griped in an armed hand ; himself behind 
Was left unseen, save to. the eye of mind ; 1426 
A hand, a foot, a face, a leg, a head, 
Stood for the whole to be imagined. 

And from the walls of strong-besieged Troy 
When their brave hope, bold Hector, march'd to 
field, 1430 

Stood many Trojan mothers sharing joy 
To see their youthful sons bright weapons wield ; 
And to their hope they such odd action yield 



That through their light joy seemed to appear, 
Like bright things stain'd, a kind of heavy fear. 

And from the strand of Dardan, where they fought, 
To Simois' reedy banks the red blood ran, 1437 
Whose waves to imitate the battle sought 
With swelling ridges ; and their ranks began 
To break upon the galled shore, and than 1440 
Retire again, till meeting greater ranks 
They join and shoot their foam at Simois' banks. 

To this well-painted piece is Lucrece come, 
To find a face where all distress is stell'd. 1444 
Many she sees where cares have carved some. 
But none where all distress and dolour dwell'd, 
Till she despairing Hecuba beheld, 
Staring on Priam's wounds with her old eyes, 
Which bleeding under Pyrrhus' proud foot Ues. 

In her the painter had anatomized 1450 

Time's ruin, beauty's wreck, and grim care's reign ; 
Her cheeks with chaps and wrinkles were dis- 
guised ; 
Of what she was no semblance did remain ; 
Her blue blood changed to black in every vein. 
Wanting the spring thflt those shrunk pipes 
have fed, 1455 

Show'd life imprison'd in a body dead. 

On this sad shadow Lucrece spends her eyes, 
And shapes her sorrow to the beldam's woes, 
Who nothing wants to answer her but cries. 
And bitter words to ban her cruel foes ; 1460 

The painter was no god to lend her those ; 
And therefore Lucrece swears he did her wrong, 
To give her so much grief and not a tongue. 

' Poor instrument,' quoth she, ' without a sound, 
I'll tune thy woes with my lamenting tongue. 
And drop sweet balm in Priam's painted wound, 
And rail on Pyrrhus that hath done him wrong. 
And with my tears quench Troy that burns so 
long, 
And with my knife scratch out the angry eyes 
Of all the Greeks that are thine enemies. 1470 

' Show me the strumpet that began this stir, 
That with my nails her beauty I may tear. 
Thy heat of lust, fond Paris, did incur 
This load of wrath that burning Troy doth bear ; 
Thy eye kindled the fire that burnetii here ; 1475 
And here in Troy, for trespass of thine eye, 
The sire, the son, the dame, and daughter die. 

' Why should the private pleasure of some one 
Become the public plague of many moe ? 
Let sin, alone committed, light alone 1480 

Upon his head that hath transgressed so ; 
Let guiltless souls be freed from guilty woe ; 
For one's offence why should so many fall, 
To plague a private sin in general ? 

' Lo, here weeps Hecuba, here Priam dies, 1485 
Here manly Hector faints, here Troilus swounds, 
Here friend by friend in bloody channel lies, 
And friend to friend gives unadvised wounds, 
And one man's lust these many lives confounds ; 
Had doting Priam check'd his son's desire, 
Troy had been bright with fame and not with 
fire.' 1491 



Line 1492-1606.] 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



393 



Here feelingly she weeps Troy's painted woes ; 
For sorrow, like a heavy-hanging bell, 
Once set on ringing, with his own weight goes ; 
Then little strength rings out the doleful kuell ; 
So Lucrece, set a-work, sad tales doth tell 1496 

To pencill'd pensiveness and colour'd sorrow ; 

She lends them words, and she their looks doth 
borrow. 

She throws her eyes about the painting round, 
And who she finds forlorn she doth lament. 
At last she sees a wretched image bound, 1501 
That piteous looks to Phrygian shepherds lent ; 
His face, though full of cares, yet show'd content ; 
Onward to Troy with the blunt swains he goes, 
So mild that Patience seem'd to scorn his woes. 

In him the painter labour'd with his skill 1506 
To hide deceit and give the harmless show 
An humble gait, calm looks, eyes wailing still, 
A brow unbent, that seem'd to welcome woe ; 
Cheeks neither red nor pale, but mingled so 1510 
That blushing red no guilty instance gave, 
Nor ashy pale the fear that false hearts have. 

But, like a constant and confirmed devil, 
He entertaiu'd a show so seeming just. 
And therein so ensconced his secret evil, 1515 
That jealousy itself could not mistrust 
False-creeping craft and pei-jury should thrust 
Into so bright a day such black-faced storms. 
Or blot with hell-born sin such saint-like forms. 

The well-skill'd workman this mild image drew 
For perjured Sinon, whose enchanting story 
The credulous old Priam after slew ; 1522 

Whose words, like wildfire, burnt the shining 

glory 
Of rich-built Ilion, that the skies were sorry. 
And little stars shot from their fixed places. 
When their glass fell wherein they view'd their 
faces. 1526 

This picture she advisedly perused. 
And chid the painter for his wondrous skill. 
Saying, some shape in Sinon's was abused ; 
So fair a form lodged not a mind so ill ; 1530 

And still on him she gazed, and gazing still 
Such signs of truth in his plain face she spied 
That she concludes the picture was belied. 

'It cannot be,' quoth she, 'that so much guile' — 
She would have said 'can lurk in such a look;' 
But Tarquin's shape came in her mind the while. 
And from her tongue 'can lurk' from 'cannot' 
took ; 1537 

'It cannot be' she in that sense forsook. 
And turn'd it thus, ' It cannot be, I find. 
But such a face should bear a wicked mind ; 

For even as subtle Sinon here is painted, 1541 
So sober-sad, so weary, and so mild. 
As if with grief or travail he had fainted. 
To me came Tarquiu armed ; so beguiled 
With outward honesty, but yet defiled 1545 

With inward vice ; as Priam him did cherish, 
So did I Tarquin ; so my Troy did perish. 

Look, look, how listening Priam wets his eyes. 
To see those borrow'd tears that Sinon sheds ! 
Priam, why art thou old and yet not wise? 1550 



For every tear he falls a Trojan bleeds ; 

His eye drops fire, no water thence proceeds ; 

Those round clear pearls of his that move thy 
pity 

Are balls of quenchless fire to burn thy city. 

' Such devils steal effects from lightless hell ; 
For Sinon in his fire doth quake with cold, 1556 
And in that cold hot-burning fire doth dwell; 
These contraries such unity do hold, 
Only to flatter fools and make them bold ; 
So Priam's trust false Sinon's tears doth flatter. 
That he finds means to burn his Troy with 
water.' 15gi 

Here, all enraged, such passion her assails, 
That patience is quite beaten from her breast. 
She tears the senseless Sinon with her nails. 
Comparing him to that unhappy guest 1565 

Whose deed hath made herself herself detest ; 

At last she smilingly with this gives o'er ; 

' Fool, fool !' quoth she, ' his wounds will not be 
sore.' 1568 

Thus ebbs and flows the current of her sorrow, 
And time doth weary time with her complaining. 
She looks for night, and then she longs for morrow, 
And both she thinks too long with her remaining; 
Short time seems long in sorrow's sharp sustain- 
ing; 1573 
Though woe be heavy, yet it seldom sleeps. 
And they that watch see time how slow it creeps. 

Which all this time hath overslipp'd her thought, 
That she with painted images hath spent ; 
Being from the feeling of her own grief brought 
By deep surmise of others' detriment. 
Losing her woes in shows of discontent. 1580 
It easeth some, though none it ever cured. 
To think their dolour others have endured. 

But now the mindful messenger come back 
Brings home his lord and other company ; 
Who finds his Lucrece clad in mourning black ; 
And round about her tear-distaiued eye 1586 
Blue circles stream'd, like rainbows in the sky; 
These water-galls in her dim element 
Foretell new storms to those already spent. 

Which when her sad-beholding husband saw, 
Amazedly in her sad face he stares ; 1591 

Her eyes, though sod in tears, look'd red and raw, 
Her lively colour kill'd with deadly cares. 
He hath no power to ask her how she fares ; 
Both stood, like old acquaintance in a trance, 
Met far from home, wondering each other's 
chance. 1596 

At last he takes her by the bloodless hand, 
And thus begins : ' What uncouth ill event 
Hath thee befall'n, that thou dost trembling stand? 
Sweet love, what spite hath thy fair colour spent? 
Why art thou thus attired in discontent ? 1601 
Unmask, dear dear, this moody heaviness. 
And tell thy grief, that we may §ive redress.' 

Three times with sighs she gives her sorrow fire, 
Ere once she can discharge one word of woe ; 
At length address'd to answer his desire, 1606 



394 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



[Line 1607-1722. 



She modestly prepares to let them know 
Her honour is ta'en prisoner by the foe ; 
While CoUatine and his consorted lords 1609 
With sad attention long to hear her words. 

And now this pale swan in her watery nest 
Begins the sad dirge of her certain ending ; 
' Few words,' quoth she, ' shall fit the trespass best, 
Where no excuse can give the fault amending; 
In me nioe woes than words are now depending; 
And my laments would be drawn out too long. 
To tell them all with one poor tired tongue. 

' Then be this all the task it hath to say : 1618 
Dear husband, in the interest of thy bed 
A stranger came, and on that pillow lay 
Where thou wast wont to rest thy weary head ; 
And what wrong else may be imagined 
By foul enforcement might be done to me, 
From that, alas, thy Lucrece is not free. 1624 

' For in the dreadful dead of dark midnight, 
With shining falchion in my chamber came 
A creeping creature, with a flaming light. 
And softly cried " Awake, thou Roman dame, 
And entertain my love; else lasting shame 
On thee and thine this night I will inflict, 
If thou my love's desire do contradict. 1631 

'" For some hard-favour'd groom of thine," quoth 

he, 
" Unless thou yoke thy liking to my will, 
I'll murder straight, and then I'll slaughter thee, 
And swear I found you where you did fulfil 
The loathsome act of lust, and so did kill 1636 
The lechers in their deed ; this act will be 
My fame, and thy perpetual infamy." 

'With this, I did begin to start and cry ; 
And then against my heart he set his sword, 
Swearing, unless I took all patiently, 1641 

I should not live to speak another word ; 
So should my shame still rest upon record, 
And never bo forgot in mighty Rome 
The adulterate death of Lucrece and her groom. 

' Mine enemy was strong, my poor self weak, 1646 
And far the weaker with so strong a fear ; 
My bloody judge forbade my tongue to speak ; 
No rightful plea might plead for justice there; 
His scarlet lust came evidence to swear 1650 

That my poor beauty had purloin'd his eyes; 

And when the judge is robb'd, the prisoner dies. 

'0 teach me how to make mine own excuse! 
Or, at the least, this refuge let me find ; 1654 

Though my gross blood be stain'd with this abuse. 
Immaculate and spotless is my mind ; 
That was not forced ; that never was inclined 
To accessary yieldings, but still pure 
Doth in her poison'd closet yet endure.' 

Lo, here, the hopeless merchant of this loss. 
With head declined, and voice damm'd up with 
woe, 1661 

With sad-set eyes and wretched arms across, 
From lips new-waxen pale begins to blow 
The grief away that stops his answer so ; 
But, wretched as he is, he strives in vain ; 
What he breathes out his breath drinks up 
again. 1666 



As through an arch the violent roaring tide 
Outruns the eye that doth behold his haste, 
Yet in the eddy boundeth in his pride 1669 

Back to the strait that forced him on so fast. 
In rage sent out, recall'd in rage, being past ; 
Even so his sighs, his sorrows, make a saw. 
To push grief on and back the same grief draw. 

Which speechless woe of his poor she attendeth. 
And his untimely frenzy thus awaketh : 1675 
' Dear lord, thy sorrow to my sorrow lendeth 
Another jjower; no flood by raining slaketh. 
My woe too sensible thy passion maketh 
More feeling-painful ; let it then sufiice 1679 
To drown one woe, one pair of weeiaing eyes. 

' And for my sake, when I might charm thee so. 
For she that was thy Lucrece, now attend me ; 
Be suddenly revenged on my foe, 
Thine, mine, his own; suppose thou dost defend 

me 
From what is past; the help that thou shalt lend 
me 1685 

Comes all too late, yet let the traitor die ; 
For sparing justice feeds iniquity. 

'But ere I name him, you fair lords,' quoth she. 
Speaking to those that came with Collatine, 
' Shall plight your honourable faiths to me, 1690 
With swift pursuit to venge this wrong of mine ; 
For 'tis a meritorious fair design 

To chase injustice with revengeful arms; 

Knights, by their oaths, should right poor ladies' 
harms.' 

At this request, with noble disposition 1695 

Each present lord began to promise aid, 
As bound in knighthood to her imposition, 
Longing to hear the hateful foe bewray'd. 1698 
But she, that yet her sad task hath not said. 
The protestation stops. 'O, speak,' quoth she, 
' How may this forced stain be wiped from me? 

' What is the quality of my offence, 
Being constrain'd with dreadful circumstance ? 
May my pure mind with the foul act dispense, 
My low-declined honour to advance? 1705 

May any terms acquit me from this chance? 

The poison'd fountain clears itself again ; 

And why not I from this compelled stain?' 

With this, they all at once began to say, 1709 
Her body's stain her mind untainted clears ; 
While with a joyless smile she turns away 
The face, that map which deep impression bears 
Of hard misfortune, carved in it with tears. 
' No, no,' quoth she, ' no dame hereafter living 
By my excuse shall claim excuse's giving.' 1715 

Here with a sigh, as if her heart would break. 
She throws forth Tarquin's name ; ' He, he,' she 

says. 
But more than 'he' her poor tongue could not 

speak ; 
Till after many accents and delays, 1719 

Untimely breathings, sick and short assays. 
She utters this : ' He, he, fair lords, 'tis he. 
That guides this hand to give this wound to me.' 



Line 1723-1837.] 



THE RAPE OF LUCRECE 



395 



Even here she sheathed in her harmless breast 
Aharrafiil knife, that thence her soul unsheathed ; 
That blow did bail it from the deep unrest 172o 
Of that polluted prison where it breathed ; 
Her contrite sighs unto the clouds bequeathed 

Her winged spright, and through her wounds 
doth fly 

Life's lasting date from cancell'd destiny. 

Stone-still, astonish'd with this deadly deed, 
Stood Collatine and all his lordly crew ; 1731 

Till Lucrece' father, that beholds her bleed, 
Himself on her self-slaughter'd body threw ; 
And from the purple fountain Brutus drew 
The murderous knife, and, as it left the place. 
Her blood, in poor revenge, held it in chase ; 

And bubbling from her breast, it doth divide 
In two slow rivers, that the crimson blood 
Circles her body in on every side, 
Who, like a late-sack'd island, vastly stood 1740 
Bare and unpeopled in this fearful flood. 
Some of her blood still pure and red remain'd, 
And some look'd black, and that false Tarquin 
staiu'd. 

About the mourning and congealed face 
Of that black blood a watery rigol goes, 1745 
Which seems to weep upon the tainted place ; 
And ever since, as pitying Lucrece' woes, 
Corrupted blood some watery token shows ; 
And blood untainted still doth red abide, 
Blualiing at that which is so putrifled. 1750 

' Daughter, dear daughter,' old Lucretius cries, 
'That life was mine which thou hast here de- 
prived. 
If in the child the father's image lies, 
Where shall I live now Lucrece is unlived? 
Thou wast not to this end from me derived. 
If children pre-decease progenitors, 1756 

We are their oflfspring, and they none of ours. 

'Poor broken glass, I often did behold 
In thy sweet semblance my old age new born ; 
But now that fair fresh mirror, dim and old, 1760 
Shows me a bare-boned death by time outworn; 
O, from thy cheeks my image thou hast torn, 
And shiver'd all the beauty of my glass, 
That I no more can see what once I was. 

'0 time, cease thou thy course and last no longer. 
If they surcease to be that should survive. 1766 
Shall rotten death make conquest of the stronger, 
And leave the faltering, feeble souls alive ? 
The old bees die, the young possess their hive; 
Then live, sweet Lucrece, live again, and see 
Thy father die, and not thy father thee !' 1771 

By this, starts Collatine as from a dream, 
And bids Lucretius give his sorrow place ; 
And then in key-cold Lucrece' bleeding stream 
He falls, and bathes the pale fear in his face. 
And counterfeits to die with her a space ; 1776 
Till manly shame bids him possess his breath, 
And live to be revenged on her death. 

The deep vexation of his inward soul 1779 

Hath served a dumb arrest upon his tongue ; 
Who, mad that sorrow should his use control 



Or keep him from heart-easing words so long, 
Begins to talk ; but through his lips do throng 

Weak words, so thick come in his poor heart's 
aid 1784 

That no man could distinguish what he said. 

Yet sometime 'Tarquin' was pronounced plain. 
But through his teeth, as if the name he tore. 
This windy tempest, till it blow up rain, 
Held back his sorrow's tide, to make it more; 
At last it rains, and busy winds give o'er; 1790 
Then son and father weep with equal strife 
Who should weep most, for daughter or for wife. 

The one doth call her his, the other his. 
Yet neither may possess the claim they lay. 
The father says ' She's mine.' ' O, mine she is,' 
Eeplies her husband ; ' do not take away 1796 
My sorrow's interest; let no mourner say 
He weeps for her, for she was only mine, 
And only must be wail'd by Collatine.' 

'O,' quoth Lucretius, 'I did give that life ISOO 
Which she too early and too late hath spill'd.' 
' Woe, woe,' quoth Collatine, ' she was my wife ; 
I owed her, and 'tis mine that she hath kill'd.' 
'My daughter' and 'my wife' with clamours fill'd 
The dispersed air, who, holding Lucrece' life, 
Answer'd their cries, 'my daughter' and 'my 
wife.' 1806 

Brutus, who pluck'd the knife from Lucrece' side. 
Seeing such emulation in their woe. 
Began to clothe his wit in state and pride. 
Burying in Lucrece' wound his folly's show. 
He with the Romans was esteemed so ISll 

As silly-jeering idiots are with kings. 
For sportive words and uttering foolish things ; 

But now he throws that shallow habit by 
Wherein deep policy did him disguise, 1815 

And arm'd his long-hid wits advisedly 
To check the tears in Collatinus' eyes. 
' Thou wronged lord of Rome,' quoth he, ' arise ; 
Let my unsounded self, supposed a fool, 
Now set thy long-experienced wit to school. 

'Why, Collatine, is woe the cure for woe? 1S21 
Do wounds help wounds, or grief help grievous 

deeds ? 
Is it revenge to give thyself a blow 
For his foul act by whom thy fair wife bleeds? 
Such childish humour from weak minds proceeds ; 
Thy wretched wife mistook the matter so, 
To slay herself that should have slain her foe. 

' Courageous Roman, do not steep thy heart 
In such relenting dew of lamentations, 1829 

But kneel with me and help to bear thy part 
To rouse our Roman gods with invocations 
That they will suffer these abominations. 
Since Rome herself in them doth stand dis- 
graced. 
By our strong arms from forth her fair streets 
chased. 

' Now, by the Capitol that we adore, 1835 

And by this chaste blood so unjustly stained. 
By heaven's fair sun that breeds the fat earth's 
store, 



396 



SONNETS 



[Son. 1-6. 



By all our country rights in Rome maintained, 

And by chaste Lucrece' soul that late complained 

Her wrongs to us, and by this bloody knife, 

We will revenge the death of this true wife !' 

This said, he struck his hand upon his breast, 
And kiss'd the fatal knife, to end his vow. 
And to his protestation urged the rest, 1844 

Who, wondering at him, did his words allow ; 
Then jointly to the ground their knees they bow; 



And that deep vow, which Brutus made before, 
He doth again repeat, and that they swore. 

AVhen they had sworn to this advised doom, 1849 
They did conclude to bear dead Lucrece thence, 
To show her bleeding body thorough Rome, 
And so to publish Tarquin's foul offence ; 
Which being done with speedy diligence. 
The Romans plausibly did give consent 
To Tarquin's everlasting banishment. 1855 



SONNETS 



From fairest creatures we desire increase. 
That thereby beauty's rose might never die, 
But as the riper should by time decease. 
His tender heir might bear his memory ; 4 

But thou, contracted to thine own bright eyes, 
Feed'st thy light's flame with self-substantial fuel, 
Making a famine where abundance lies, 
Thyself thy foe, to thy sweet self too cruel. 
Thou that art now the world's fresh ornament 
And only herald to the gaudy spring, 10 

Within thine own bud buriest thy content 
And, tender churl, makest waste in niggarding. 
Pity the world, or else this glutton be, 
To eat the world's due, by the grave and thee. 



When forty winters shall besiege thy brow 
And dig deep trenches in thy beauty's field. 
Thy youth's proud livery, so gazed on now. 
Will be a tatter'd weed, of small worth held; 
Then being ask'd where all thy beauty lies, 5 
Where all the treasure of thy lusty days, 
To say, within thine own deep-sunken eyes. 
Were an all-eating shame and thriftless praise. 
How much more praise deserved thy beauty's use, 
If thou couldst answer 'This fair child of mine 
Shall sum my count and make my old excuse,' 
Proving liis beauty by succession thine ! 12 

This were to be new made when thou art old, 
And see thy blood warm when thou feel'st it cold. 



Look in thy glass, and tell the face thou viewest 
Now is the time that face should form another ; 
Whose fresh repair if now thou not renewest. 
Thou dost beguile the world, unbless some mother. 
For where is she so fair whose unear'd womb 
Disdains the tillage of thy husbandry? 6 

Or who is he so fond will be the tomb 
Of his self-love, to stop posterity ? 
Thou art thy mother's glass, and she in thee 
Calls back the lovely April of her prime ; 10 

So thou through windows of thine age shalt see, 
Despite of wrinkles, this thy golden time. 



But if thou live, remember'd not to be. 
Die single, and thine image dies with thee. 



Unthrifty loveliness, why dost thou spend 
Upon thyself thy beauty's legacy? 
Nature's bequest gives nothing, but doth lend, 
And being frank, she lends to tbose are free. 
Then, beauteous niggard, why dost thou abuse 5 
The bounteous largess given thee to give? 
Profitless usurer, why dost thou use 
So great a sum of sums, yet canst not live 7 
For having traflSc with thyself alone. 
Thou of thyself thy sweet self dost deceive. 10 
Then how, when nature calls thee to be gone, " 
What acceptable audit canst thou leave? 
Thy unused beauty must be tomb'd with thee, 
Which, used, lives th' executor to be. 



Those hours that with gentle work did frame 

The lovely gaze where every eye doth dwell, 

Will play the tyrants to the very same 

And that unfair which fairly doth excel; 

For never-resting time leads summer on 5 

To hideous winter and confounds him there ; 

Sap check'd with frost and lusty leaves quite gone, 

Beauty o'ersnow'd and bareness every where; 

Then, were not summer's distillation left, 

A liquid prisoner pent in walls of glass, 10 

Beauty's effect with beauty were bereft. 

Nor it, nor no remembrance what it was ; 

But flowers distill'd, though they with winter 
meet, 

Leese but their show ; their substance still lives 
sweet. 

e 

Then let not winter's ragged hand deface 
In thee thy summer, ere thou be distill'd ; 
Make sweet some vial; treasure thou some place 
With beauty's treasure, ere it be self-kill'd. 
That use is not forbidden usury, 5 

Which happies those that pay the willing loan ; 
That's for thyself to breed another thee, 
Or ten times happier, be it ten for one ; 



Son. 6-14.] 



SONNETS 



397 



Ten times thyself were happier than thou art, 
If ten of thine ten times refigured thee ; 10 

Then what could death do, if thou shouldst depart, 
Leaving thee living in posterity? 
Be not self-will'd, for thou art much too fair 
To be death's conquest and make worms thine 
heir. 



Lo, in the orient wlien the gracious light 
Lifts up his burning head, each under eye 
Doth homage to his new-appearing sight. 
Serving with looks his sacred majesty ; 
And having clirab'd the steep-up heavenly hill, 5 
Resembling strong youth in his middle age, 
Yet mortal looks adore his beauty still. 
Attending on his golden pilgrimage ; 
But when from highmost pitch, with weary car, 
Like feeble age, he reeleth from the day, 10 

The eyes, 'fore duteous, now converted are 
From his low tract, and look another way ; 
So thou, thyself out-going in thy noon, 
Unlook'd on diest, unless thou get a son. 



Music to hear, why hear'st thou music sadly ? 
Sweets with sweets war not, joy delights in joy. 
Why lovest thou that which thou receivest not 

gladly. 
Or else receivest with pleasure thine annoy ? 
If the true concord of well tuned sounds, 5 

By itnions married, do offend thine ear, 
They do but sweetly chide thee, who confounds 
In singleness the parts that thou shouldst bear. 
Mark how one string, sweet husband to another. 
Strikes each in each by mutual ordering ; 10 

Eesembling sire and child and happy mother, 
Who, all in one, one pleasing note do sing; 
Whose speechless song, being many, seeming 

one, 
Sings this to thee: 'Thott single wilt prove 

none.' 

9 

Is it for fear to wet a widow's eye 
That thou consumest thyself in single life? 
Ah ! if thou issueless shalt hap to die, 
The world will wail thee, like a makeless wife ; 
The world will be thy widow, and still weep 5 
That thou no form of thee hast left behind. 
When every private widow well may keep 
By children's eyes her husband's shape in mind. 
Look, what an unthrift in the world doth spend 
Shifts but his place, for still the world enjoys it ; 
But beauty's waste hath in the world an end, 11 
And kept unused, the user so destroys it. 
No love toward others in that bosom sits 
That on himself such murderous shame com- 
mits. 

10 

For shame ! deny that thou bear'st love to any, 
Who for thyself art so unprovident. 
Grant, if thou wilt, thou art beloved of many. 
But that thou none lovest is most evident ; 
For thou art so possess'd with murderous hate 5 
That 'gainst thyself thou stick'st not to conspire. 
Seeking that beauteous roof to ruinate 
Which to repair should be thy chief desire. 



O, change thy thought, that I may change my 

mind ! 
Shall hate be fairer lodged than gentle love? 10 
Be, as thy presence is, gracious and kind. 
Or to thyself at least kind-hearted prove; 
Make thee another self, for love of me. 
That beauty still may live in thine or thee. 

11 

As fast as thou shalt wane, so fast thou growest 
In one of thine, from that which tliou departest; 
And that fresh blood which youngly thou be- 

stowest 
Thou mayst call thine when thou from youth 

convertest. 
Herein lives wisdom, beauty, and increase ; 5 
Without this, folly, age, and cold decay ; 
If all were minded so, the times should cease 
And threescore year would make the world away. 
Let those whom Nature hath not made for store. 
Harsh, featureless, and rude, barrenly perish; 
Look, whom she best endow'd she gave the more; 
Which bounteous gift thou shouldst in bounty 
cherish; 12 

She carved thee for her seal, and meant thereby 
Thou shouldst print more, not let that copy die. 

la 

When I do count the clock that tells the time. 
And see the brave day sunk in hideous night; 
When I behold the violet past prime. 
And sable curls all silver'd o'er with white ; 
When lofty trees I see barren of leaves, 5 

Whicli erst from heat did canopy the herd. 
And summer's green all girded up in sheaves. 
Borne on the bier with white and bristly beard. 
Then of thy beauty do I question make. 
That thou among the wastes of time must go. 
Since sweets and beauties do themselves forsake 
And die as fast as they see others grow ; 12 

And nothing 'gainst Time's scythe can make 
defence 

Save breed, to brave him when he takes thee 
hence. 

13 
0, that you were yourself ! but, love, you are 
No longer yours than you yourself here live ; 
Against this coming end you should prepare. 
And your sweet semblance to some otlier give. 
So should that beauty which you hold in lease 
Find no determination ; then you were 6 

Yourself again, after yourself 's decease, 
When your sweet issue your sweet form should 

bear. 
Who lets so fair a house fall to decay, 
AVhich husbandry in honour might uphold 10 
Against the stormy gusts of winter's day 
And barren rage of death's eternal cold ? 

0, none but unthrifts ; dear my love, you know 

You had a father ; let your son say so. 

14 

Not from the stars do I my judgement pluck ; 

And yet methinks I have astronomy. 

But not to tell of good or evil luck. 

Of plagues, of dearths, or seasons' quality ; 

Nor can I fortune to brief minutes tell, 5 

Pointing to each his thunder, rain, and wind, 

Or say with princes if it shall go well. 

By oft predict that I in heaven find ; 



398 



SONNETS 



[Son. 14-22. 



But from thine eyes my knowledge I derive, 
And, constant stars, in them I read such art. 
As truth and beauty shall together thrive, 11 
If from thyself to store thou vrouldst convert ; 
Or else of thee this I prognosticate : 
Thy end is truth's and beauty's doom and date. 

15 

When I consider every thing that grows 
Holds in perfection but a little moment. 
That this huge stage presenteth nought but shows 
Whereon the stars in secret influence comment; 
When I perceive that men as ^alauts increase, 
Cheered and chcck'd even by the self-same sky, 
Vaunt in their youthful sap, at height decrease. 
And wear their brave state out of memory ; 
Then the conceit of this inconstant stay 
Sets you most rich in youth before my sight 
Where wasteful Time debateth with Decay, 11 
To change your daj' of youth to sullied night; 
And all in war with Time for love of you. 
As he takes from you, I engraft you new. 

16 

But wherefore do not you a mightier way 

Make war upon this bloody tyrant. Time ? 

And fortify yourself in your decay 

With means more blessed than my barren rhyme? 

Now stand you on the top of happy hours, 5 

And many maiden gardens, yet unset, 

With virtuous wish would bear your living flowers 

Much liker than your painted counterfeit; 

So should the lines of life that life repair, 9 

Which this, Time's pencil, or my pupil pen, 

Neither in inward worth nor outward fair. 

Can make you live yourself in eyes of men. 

To give away yourself keeps yourself still ; 

And you must live, drawn by your own sweet 
skm. 

ir 

Who will believe my verse in time to come, 
If it were fiU'd with your most high deserts? 
Though yet, heaven knows, it is but as a tomb 
Which hides your life and shows not half your 

parts. 
If I could write the beauty of your eyes 5 

And in fresh numbers number all your graces. 
The age to come would say ' This poet lies ; 
Such heavenly touches ne'er touch'd earthly faces.' 
So should my papers, yellow'd with their age. 
Be scorn'd, like old men of less truth than tongue. 
And your true rights be termed a poet's rage 
And stretched metre of an antique song; 12 

But were some child of yours alive that time. 
You should live twice, in it and in my rhyme. 

18 
Shall I compare thee to a summer's day? 
Thou art more lovely and more temperate; 
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May, 
And summer's lease hath all too short a date ; 
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines, 5 
And often is his gold complexion dimm'd ; 
And every fair from fair sometimes declines. 
By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd ; 
But thy eternal summer shall not fade, 
Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest ; 10 
Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade, 
When in eternal lines to time thou growest ; 



So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see, 
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee. 

19 

Devouring Time, blunt thou the lion's paws. 
And make the earth devour her own sweet brood; 
Pluck the keen teeth from the fierce tiger's jaws, 
And burn the long-lived phoenix in her blood ; 
Make glad and sorry seasons as thou fleet'st, 5 
And do whate'er thou wilt, swift-footed Time, 
To the wide world and all her fading sweets ; 
But I forbid thee one most heinous crime ; 
O, carve not with thy hours my love's fair brow, 
Nor draw no lines there with thine antique pen; 
Him in thy course untainted do allow 11 

For beauty's pattern to succeeding men. 
Yet do thy worst, old Time; despite thy wrong, 
My love shall in my verse ever live young. 

SO 

A woman's face with Nature's own hand painted 
Hast thou, the master-mistress of my passion ; 
A woman's gentle heart, but not acquainted 
With shifting change, as is false women's fashion ; 
An eye more bright than theirs, less false in roll- 
ing, 5 
Gilding the object whereupon it gazeth ; 
A man in hue, all ' hues' in his controlling. 
Which steals men's eyes and women's souls 

amazeth. 
And for a woman wert thou first created ; 
Till Nature, as she wrought thee, fell a-doting. 
And by addition me of thee defeated, 11 

By adding one thing to my purpose nothing. 
But since she prick'd thee out for women's 

pleasure. 
Mine be thy love, and thy love's use their 
treasure. 

SI 
So is it not with me as with that Muse 
Stirr'd by a painted beauty to his verse. 
Who heaven itself for ornament doth use 
And every fair with his fair doth rehearse. 
Making a couplement of proud compare, 5 

With sun and moon, with earth and sea's rich 

gems, 
With April's first-born flowers, and all things rare 
That heaven's air in this huge rondure hems. 
O, let me, true in love, but truly write, 
And then believe me, my love is as fair 10 

As any mother's child, though not so bright 
As those gold candles fix'd in heaven's air; 
Let them say more that like of hearsay well; 
I will not praise that purpose not to sell. 

S2 

My glass shall not persuade me I am old. 
So long as youth and thou are of one date; 
But when in thee time's furrows I behold. 
Then look I death my days should expiate. 
For all that beauty that doth cover thee 5 

Is but the seemly raiment of my heart. 
Which in thy breast doth live, as thine in me; 
How can I then be elder than thou art? » 
O, therefore, love, be of thyself so wary 
As I, not for myself, but for thee will ; 10 

Bearing thy heart, which I will keep so chary 
As tender nurse her babe from faring ill. 



Son. 22-30.] 



SONNETS 



399 



Presume not on thy heart when mine is slain ; 
Thou gavest me thine, not to give back again. 

S3 

As an unperfect actor on the stage, 

Who with his fear is put besides his part. 

Or some fierce thing replete with too much rage, 

Whose strength's abundance weakens his own 

heart ; 
So I, for fear of trust, forget to say 5 

The perfect ceremony of love's rite. 
And in mine own love's strength seem to decay, 
O'ercharged with burthen of mine own love's 

might. 
O, let my books be then the eloquence 
And dumb presagers of my speaking breast; 10 
Who plead for love, and look for recompense, 
More than that tongue that more hath more ex- 

press'd. 
O, learn to read what silent love hath writ ; 
• To hear with eyes belongs to love's fine wit. 

24 

Mine eye hath play'd the painter and hath stell'd 
Thy beauty's form in table of my heart; 
My body is the frame wherein 'tis held. 
And perspective it is best painter's art. 
For through the painter must you see his skill, 5 
To find where your true image pictured lies ; 
Which in my bosom's shop is hanging still, 
That hath his windows glazed with thine eyes. 
Now see what good turns eyes for eyes have done: 
Mine eyes have drawn thy shape, and thine for 
me 10 

Are windows to my breast, where-through the sun 
Delights to peep, to gaze therein on thee ; 
Yet eyes this cunning waiit to grace their art. 
They draw but what they see, know not the 
heart. 

25 
Let those who are in favour with their stars 
Of public honour and proud titles boast. 
Whilst I, whom fortune of such triumph bars, 
Unlook'd for joy iu that I honour most. 
Great princes' favourites their fair leaves spread 
But as the marigold at the sun's eye, G 

And in themselves their pride lies buried. 
For at a frown they in their glory die. 
The painful warrior famoused for fight, 
After a thousand victories, once foil'd, 10 

Is from the book of honour razed quite, 
And all the rest forgot for which he toil'd ; 
Then happy I, that love and am beloved 
Where I may not remove nor be removed. 

26 

Lord of my love, to whom in vassalage 
Thy merit hath my duty strongly knit, 
To thee I send this written ambassage, 
To witness duty, not to show my wit ; 
Duty so great, which wit so poor as mine 5 

May make seem bare, in wanting words to show it. 
But that I hope some good conceit of thine 
In thy soul's thought, all naked, will bestow it ; 
Till whatsoever star that guides my moving, 
Points on me graciously with fair aspect, 10 

And puts apparel on my tatter'd loving, 
To show me worthy of thy sweet respect ; 



Then may I dare to boast how I do love thee; 
Till then not show my head where thou mayst 
prove me. 

sr 

Weary with toil, I haste me to my bed. 
The dear repose for limbs with travel tired; 
But then begins a journey in my head. 
To work my mind, when body's work's expired ; 
For then my thoughts, from far where I abide. 
Intend a zealous pilgrimage to thee, 6 

And keep my drooping eyelids open wide, 
Looking on darkness which the blind do see; 
Save that my soul's imaginary sight 
Presents thy shadow to my sightless view, 10 
Which, like a jewel hung in ghastly night. 
Makes black night beauteous and her old face new. 
Lo, thus, by day my limbs, by night my mind, 
For thee and for myself no quiet find. 

28 
How can I then return iu happy plight. 
That am debarr'd the benefit of rest? 
When day's oppression is not eased by night. 
But day by night, and night by day, oppress'd ? 
And each, though enemies to either's reign, 5 
Do in consent shake hands to torture me ; 
The one by toil, the other to complain 
How far I toil, still farther off from thee. 
I tell the day, to please him thou art bright, 
And dost him grace when clouds do blot the 

heaven ; 10 

So flatter I the swart-complexion'd night ; 
When sparkling stars twire not thou gild'st the 

even. 
But day doth daily draw my sorrows longer. 
And night doth nightly make grief's strength 

seem stronger. 

29 

When, in disgrace with fortune and men's eyes, 

I all alone beweep my outcast state, 

And trouble deaf heaven with my bootless cries. 

And look upon myself, and curse my fate. 

Wishing me like to one more rich in hope, 5 

Featured like him, like him with friends possess'd, 

Desiring this man's art, and that man's scope, 

AVith what I most enjoy contented least ; 

Yet in these thoughts myself almost despising. 

Haply I think on thee, and then my state, 10 

Like to the lark at break of day arising 

From sullen earth, sings hymns at heaven's gate ; 

For thy sweet love remember'd such wealth 
brings 

That then I scorn to change my state with kings. 

30 

When to the sessions of sweet silent thought 
I summon up remembrance of things past, 
I sigh the lack of many a thing I sought. 
And with old woes new wail my dear time's waste ; 
Then can I drown an eye, unused to flow, 5 

For precious friends hid in death's dateless night. 
And weep afresh love's loug-since-cancell'd woe, 
And moan the expense of many a vanish'd sight ; 
Then can I grieve at grievances foregone, 
And heavily from woe to woe tell o'er 10 

The sad account of fore-bemoaned moan. 
Which I new pay as if not paid before. 



400 



SONNETS 



[Son. 30-38. 



But if the while I think on thee, dear friend. 
All losses are restored and sorrows end, 

31 

Thy bosom is endeared with all hearts, 
Which I by lacking have supposed dead ; 
And there reigns love, and all love's loving parts, 
And all those friends which I thought buried. 
How many a holy and obsequious tear 6 

Hath dear religious love stol'n from mine eye, 
As interest of the dead, which now appear 
But things removed that hidden in thee lie! 
Thou art the grave where buried love doth live, 
Hang with the trophies of my lovers gone, 10 
Who all their parts of me to thee did give; 
That due of many now is thine alone; 
Their images I loved I view in thee, 
And thou, all they, hast all the all of me. 



If thou survive my well-contented day, 

When that churl Death my bones with dust shall 

cover, 
And Shalt by fortune once more re-survey 
These poor rude lines of thy deceased lover, 4 
Compare them with the bettering of the time. 
And though they be outstripp'd by every pen, 
Eeserve them for my love, not for their rhyme. 
Exceeded by the height of happier men. 
O, then vouchsafe me but this loving thought: 
' Had my friend's Muse grown with this growing 
age, 10 

A dearer birth than this his love had brought. 
To march in ranks of better equipage ; 
But since he died, and poets better prove. 
Theirs for their style I'll read, his for his love.' 

33 

Full many a glorious morning have I seen 
Flatter the mountain-tops with sovereign eye, 
Kissing with golden face the meadows green. 
Gilding pale streams with heavenly alchemy; 
Anon permit the basest clouds to ride 5 

With ugly rack on his celestial face. 
And from the forlorn world his visage hide. 
Stealing unseen to west with this disgrace; 
Even so my sun one early morn did shine 9 

With all-triumphant splendour on my brow ; 
But, out, alack ! he was but one hour mine. 
The region cloud hath mask'd him from me now. 

Yet him for this my love no whit disdaineth ; 

Suns of the world may stain when heaven's sun 
staineth. 

34 

Why didst thou promise such a beauteous day, 
And make me travel forth without my cloak. 
To let base clouds o'ertake me in my way, 
Hiding thy bravery in their rotten smoke? 
'Tis not enough that through the cloud thou break, 
To dry the rain on my storm-beaten face, 6 

For no man well of such a salve can speak 
That heals the wound and cures not the disgrace ; 
Nor can thy shame give physic to my grief ; 
Though thou repent, yet I have still the loss; 
The offender's sorrow lends but weak relief 11 
To him that bears the strong offence's cross. 



Ah, but those tears are pearl which thy love 

sheds. 
And they are rich and ransom all ill deeds. 

35 

No more be grieved at that which thou hast done ; 
Roses have thorns, and silver fountains mud; 
Clouds and eclipses stain both moon and suu, 
And loathsome canker lives in sweetest bud. 
All men make faults, and even I in this, 5 

Authorizing thy trespass with compare, 
Myself corrupting, salving thy amiss. 
Excusing thy sins more than thy sins are ; 
For to thy sensual fault I bring in sense, — 
Thy adverse party is thy advocate, — 10 

And 'gainst myself a lawful plea commence ; 
Such civil war is in my love and hate. 
That I an accessary needs must be 
To that sweet thief which sourly robs from me. 

36 

Let me confess that we two naust be twain, 
Although our undivided loves are one ; 
So shall those blots that do with me remain, 
Without thy help, by me be borne alone. 
In our two loves there is but one respect, 5 

Though in our lives a.separable spite. 
Which though it alter not love's sole effect. 
Yet doth it steal sweet hours from love's delight. 
I may not evermore acknowledge thee, 
Lest my bewailed guilt should do thee shame, 10 
Nor thou with public kindness honour me. 
Unless thou take that honour from thy name ; 
But do not so; I love thee in such sort. 
As thou being mine, mine is thy good report. 

sr 

As a decrepit father takes delight 
To see his active child do deeds of youth. 
So I, made lame by fortune's dearest spite, 
Take all my comfort of thy worth and truth ; 
For whether beauty, birth, or wealth, or wit, 5 
Or any of these all, or all, or more. 
Entitled in thy parts do crowned sit, 
I make my love engrafted to this store ; 
So then I am not lame, poor, nor despised, 
Whilst that this shadow doth such substance give 
That I in thy abundance am sufficed 11 

And by a part of all thy glory live. 

Look, what is best, that best I wish in thee; 

This wish I have ; then ten times happy me ! 

38 

How can my Muse want subject to invent. 
While thou dost breathe, that pour'st into my 

verse 
Thine own sweet argument, too excellent 
For every vulgar paper to rehearse ? 
O, give thyself the thanks, if aught in me 5 

Worthy perusal stand against thy sight ; 
For who's so dumb that cannot write to thee, 
When thou thyself dost give invention light? 
Be thou the tenth Muse, ten times more in worth 
Than those old nine which rhymers invocate ; 10 
And he that calls on thee, let him bring forth 
Eternal numbers to outlive long date. 
If my slight Muse do please these curious days. 
The pain be mine, but thine shall be the praise- 



Son. 39-47-] 



SONNETS 



401 



39 

O, how thy worth with manners may I sing, 
When thou art all the better part of me? 
What can mine own praise to mine own self bring 7 
And what is't but mine own when I praise thee ? 
Even for this let us divided live, 5 

And our dear love lose name of single one, 
That by this separation I may give 
That due to thee which thou deservest alone. 

absence, what a torment wouldst thou prove, 
Were it not thy sour leisure gave sweet leave 10 
To entertain the time with thoughts of love, 
Which time and thoughts so sweetly doth deceive. 

And that thou teachest how to make one twain. 
By praising him here who doth hence remain ! 

Take all my loves, my love, yea, take them all ; 
What hast thou then more than thou hadst before? 
No love, my love, that thou mayst true love call ; 
All mine was thine before thou hadst this more. 
Then, if for my love thou my love receivest, 5 

1 cannot blame thee for my love thou usest ; 
But yet be blamed, if thou thyself deceivest 
By wilful taste of what thyself refusest. 

I do forgive thy robbery, gentle thief. 
Although thou steal thee all my poverty ; 10 

And yet, love knows, it is a greater grief 
To bear love's wrong than hate's known injury. 
Lascivious grace, in whom all ill well shows. 
Kill me with spites ; yet we must not be foes. 

41 

Those pretty wrongs that liberty commits. 
When I am sometime absent from thy heart, 
Thy beauty and thy years full well beiits. 
For still temptation follows where thou art. 
Gentle thou art, and therefore to be won, 5 

Beauteous thou art, therefore to be assailed ; 
And when a woman woos, what woman's son 
Will sourly leave her till she have prevailed ? 
Ay me! but yet thou mightst my seat forbear. 
And chide thy beauty and thy straying youth. 
Who lead thee in their riot even there 11 

Where thou art forced to break a twofold truth. 
Hers, by thy beauty tempting her to thee. 
Thine, by thy beauty being false to me. 



That thou hast her, it is not all my grief. 
And yet it may be said I loved her dearly ; 
That she hath thee, is of my wailing chief, 
A loss in love that touches me more nearly. 
Loving offenders, thus I will excuse ye : 5 

Thou dost love her, because thou know'st I love her ; 
And for my sake even so doth she abuse me, 
Sufiering my friend for my sake to approve her. 
If I lose thee, my loss is my love's gain. 
And losing her, my friend hath found that loss ; 
Both find each other, and I lose both twain, 11 
And both for my sake lay on me this cross ; 

But here's the joy ; my friend and I are one ; 

Sweet flattery ! then she loves but me alone. 

43 

When most I wink, then do mine eyes best see. 
For all the day they view things unrespected; 
But when I sleep, in dreams they look on thee. 
And, darkly bright, are bright in dark directed. 
26 



Then thou, whose shadow shadows doth make 
bright, 5 

How would thy shadow's form form happy show 
To the clear day with thy much clearer light, 
AVhen to unseeing eyes thy shade shines so ! 
How would, I say, mine eyes be blessed made 
By looking on thee in the living day, 10 

When in dead night thy fair imperfect shade 
Through heavy sleep on sightless eyes doth stay! 
All days are nights to see till I see thee. 
And nights bright days when dreams do show 
thee me. 

44 
If the dull substance of my flesh were thought, 
Injurious distance should not stop my way; 
For then, despite of space, I would be brought. 
From limits far remote, where thou dost stay. 
No matter then although my foot did stand 5 
Upon the farthest earth removed from thee ; 
For nimble thought can jump both sea and land, 
As soon as think the place where he would be. 
But, ah, thought kills me, that I am not thought, 
To leap large lengths of miles when thou art gone, 
But that, so m'uch of earth and water wrought, 
I must attend time's leisure with my moan ; 
Eeceiving nought by elements so slow 13 

But heavy tears, badges of cither's woe. 

45 

The other two, slight air and purging fire, 
Are both with thee, wherever I abide ; 
The first my thought, the other my desire. 
These present-absent with swift motion slide. 
For when these quicker elements are gone 5 

In tender embassy of love to thee. 
My life, being made of four, with two alone 
Sinks down to death, oppress'd with melancholy; 
Until life's composition be recured 9 

By those swift messengers return'd from thee. 
Who even but now come back again assured 
Of thy fair health, recounting it to me ; 
This told, I joy; but then no longer glad, 
I send them back again, and straight grow sad. 

4e 

Mine eye and heart are at a mortal war. 
How to divide the conquest of thy sight ; 
Mine eye my heart thy picture's sight would bar, 
My heart mine eye the freedom of that right. 
My heart doth plead that thou in him dost lie, 
A closet never pierced with crystal eyes, 6 

But the defendant doth that plea deny, 
And says in him thy fair appearance lies. 
To 'cide this title is impanneled 
A quest of thoughts, all tenants to the heart ; 
And by their verdict is determined 11 

The clear eye's moiety and the dear heart's part ; 
As thus: mine eye's due is thine outward part. 
And my heart's right thine inward love of heart. 



Betwixt mine eye and heart a league is took. 
And each doth good turns now unto the other; 
When that mine eye is famish'd for a look, 
Or heart in love with sighs himself doth smother, 
With my love's picture then my eye doth feast, 
And to the painted banquet bids my heart ; 6 
Another time mine eye is my heart's guest. 
And in his thoughts of love doth share a part ; 



402 



SONNETS 



[Son. 47-55. 



So, either by thy picture or iny love, 
Thyself away art present still with me; 10 

For thou not farther than my thoughts canst move. 
And I am still with them and they with thee ; 
Or, if they sleep, thy picture in my sight 
Awakes my heart to heart's and eye's delight. 

48 
How careful was I, when I took my way, 
Each trifle under truest bars to thrust, 
That to my use it might unused stay 
From hands of falsehood, in sure wards of trust ! 
But thou, to whom my jewels trifles are, 5 

Most worthy comfort, now my greatest grief, 
Thou, best of dearest and mine only care. 
Art left the prey of every vulgar thief. 
Thee have I not lock'd up in any chest, 
Save where thou art not, though I feel thou art. 
Within the gentle closure of my breast, 11 

From whence at pleasure thou mayst come and 
part; 
And even thence thou wilt be stol'n, I fear. 
For truth proves thievish for a prize so dear. 

49 

Against that time, if ever that time come, 
When I shall see thee frown on my defects. 
When as thy love hath cast his utmost sum, 
Call'd to that audit by advised respects ; 4 

Against that time when thou shalt strangely 

pass, 
And scarcely greet me with that sun, thine eye. 
When love, converted from the thing it was, 
Shall reasons find of settled gravity ; 
Against that time do I ensconce me here 
Within the knowledge of mine own desert, 10 
And this my hand against myself uprear. 
To guard the lawful reasons on thy part ; 
To leave poor me thou hast the strength of laws. 
Since why to love I can allege no cause. 

oO 

How heavy do I journey on the way. 
When what I seek, my weary travel's end, 
Doth teach that ease and that repose to say, 
' Thus far the miles are measured from thy friend !' 
The beast that bears me, tired with my woe, 5 
Plods dully on, to bear that weight in me. 
As if by some instinct the wretch did know 
His rider loved not speed, being made from thee; 
The bloody spur cannot provoke him on 
That sometimes anger thrusts into his hide; 
Which heavily he answers with a groan, 11 

More sharp to me than spurring to his side ; 
For that same groan d(3th put this in my mind : 
My grief lies onward, and my joy behind. 

51 

Thus can my love excuse the slow offence 
Of my diill bearer when from thee I speed ; 
From where thou art why should I haste me 

thence? 
Till I return, of posting is no need. 
O, what excuse will my poor beast then find. 
When swift extremity can seem but slow ? 6 

Then should I spur, though mounted on the wind. 
In winged speed no motion shall I know; 



Then can no horse with my desire keep pace; 
Therefore desire, of perfect'st love being made. 
Shall neigli, — no dull flesh, — in his fiery race; 11 
But love, for love, thus shall excuse my jade ; 
Since from thee going he went wilful-slow, 
Towards thee I'll run and give him leave to go. 

53 

So am I as the rich, whose blessed key 
Can bring him to his sweet up-locked treasure, 
The which he will not every hour survey. 
For blunting the fine point of seldom pleasure. 
Therefore are feasts so solemn and so rare, f 

Since, seldom coming, in the long year set, • 
Like stones of worth they thinly placed are. 
Or captain jewels in the carcanet. 
So is the time that keeps you as my chest. 
Or as the wardrobe which the robe doth hide, 
To make some special instant special blest, 11 
By new unfolding his imprison'd pride. 
Blessed are you, whose worthiness gives scope, 
Being had, to/riumph, being lack'd, to hope. 

53 

What is your substance, whereof are you made. 
That millions of strange shadows on you tend? 
Since every one hath, every one, one shade. 
And you, but one, can every shadow lend. 
Describe Adonis, and the counterfeit 5 

Is poorly imitated after you ; 
On Helen's cheek all art of beauty set. 
And you in Grecian tires are painted new ; 
Speak of the spring and foison of the year, 
The one doth shadow of your beauty show, 10 
The other as j'our bounty doth appear ; 
And you in every blessed shape we know. 
In all external grace you have some part. 
But you like none, none you, for constant heart. 

54 

0, how much more doth beauty beauteous seem 
By that sweet ornament which truth doth give ! 
The rose looks fair, but fairer we it deem 
For that sweet odour which doth in it live. 
The canker-blooms have full as deep a dye 5 

As the perfumed tincture of the roses, 
Hang on such thorns, and play as wantonly 
When summer's breath their masked buds dis- 
closes ; 
But, for their virtue only is their show, 
They live unwoo'd and unrespected fade ; 10 

Die to themselves. Sweet roses do not so ; 
Of their sweet deaths are sweetest odours made ; 
And so of you, beauteous and lovely youth, 
When that shall vade, by verse distills your 
truth. 

55 
Not marble, nor the gilded monuments 
Of princes, shall outlive this powerful rhyme; 
But you shall shine more bright in these contents 
Than unswept stone, besmear'd with sluttish 

time. 
When wasteful war shall statues overturn, 5 

And broils root out the work of masonry. 
Nor Mars his sword nor war's quick fire shall 

burn 
The living record of your memory. 



Son. 55-63.] 



SONNETS 



403 



'Gainst death and all-oblivious enmity 

Shall you pace forth ; your praise shall still find 
room 10 

Even in the eyes of all posterity 

That wear this world out to the ending doom. 
So, till the judgement that yourself arise, 
You live in this, and dwell in lovers' eyes. 

56 

Sweet love, renew thy force ; he it not said 
Thy edge should blunter be than appetite. 
Which but to-day by feeding is allay'd, 
To-morrow sharpen'd in his former might; 
So, love, be thou ; although to-day thou fill 5 
Thy hungry eyes even till they wink with full- 
ness, 
To-morrow see again, and do not kill 
The spirit of love with a perpetual dullness. 
Let this sad interim like the ocean be 9 

Which parts the shore, where two contracted new 
Come daily to the banks, that, when they see 
Return of love, more blest may be the view ; 
Or call it winter, which, being full of care. 
Makes summer's welcome thrice more wish'd, 
more rare. 

57 

Being your slave, what should I do but tend 
Upon the hours and times of your desire? 
I have no precious time at all to spend, 
Nor services to do, till you require. 4 

Nor dare I chide the world-without-end hour 
Whilst I, my sovereign, watch the clock for you. 
Nor think the bitterness of absence sour 
When you have bid .your servant once adieu ; 
Nor dare I question with my jealous thought 
Where you may be, or your affairs suppose, 10 
But, like a sad slave, stay and think of nought 
Save, where you are how happy you make those. 
So true a fool is love that in your will. 
Though you do any thing, he thinks no ill. 



58 
That god forbid that made me first your slave, 
I should in thought control your times of pleasure. 
Or at your hand the account of hours to crave, 
Being your vassal, bound to stay your leisure ! 
O, let me sufl'er, being at your beck, 5 

The imprison'd absence of your liberty ; 
And patience, tame to sufferance, bide each check, 
Without accusing you of injury. 
Be where you list, your charter is so strong 
That you yourself may privilege your time 10 
To what you will ; to you it doth belong 
Yourself to pardon of self-doing crime. 
I am to wait, though waiting so be hell. 
Not blame your pleasure, be it ill or well. 



59 

If there be nothing new, but that which is 
Hath been before, how are our brains beguiled, 
Which, labouring for invention, bear amiss 
The second burthen of a former child ! 
O, that record could with a backward look, 5 
Even of five hundred courses of the sun, 
Show me your image in some antique book, 
Since mind at first in character was done, 



That I might see what the old world could say 
To this composed wonder of your frame ; 10 

Whether we are mended, or whether better they, 
Or whether revolution be the same. 
O, sure I am, the wits of former days 
To subjects worse have given admiring praise. 

60 

Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore. 
So do our minutes hasten to their end ; 
Each changing place with that which goes before. 
In sequent toil all forwards do contend. 
Nativity, once in the main of light, 5 

Crawls to maturity, wherewith being crown'd, 
Crooked'eclipses 'gainst his glory fight, 
And Time that gave doth now his gift confound. 
Time doth transfix the flourish set on youth. 
And delves the parallels in beauty's brow, 10 

Feeds on the rarities of nature's truth, 
And nothing stands but for his scythe to mow ; 
And yet to times in hope my verse shall stand. 
Praising thy worth, despite his cruel hand. 

61 

Is it thy will thy image should keep open 

My heavy eyelids to the weary night ? 

Dost thou desire my slumbers should be broken. 

While shadows like to thee do mock my sight? 

Is it thy spirit that tho'u send'st from thee 5 

So far from home into my deeds to pry, 

To find out shames and idle hours in me. 

The scope and tenour of thy jealousy? 

0, no ! thy love, though much, is not so great ; 

It is my love that keeps mine eye awake ; 10 

Mine own true love that doth my rest defeat. 

To play the watchman ever for thy sake ; 

For thee watch I whilst thou dost wake else- 
where. 

From me far off, with others all too near. 



Sin of self-love possesseth all mine eye 
And all my soul and all my every part ; 
And for this sin there is no remedy. 
It is so grounded inward in my heart. 
Methinks no face so gracious is as mine, 5 

No shape so true, no truth of such account ; 
And for myself mine own worth do define, 
As I all other in all worths surmount. 
But when my glass shows me myself indeed, 
Beated and chopp'd with tann'd antiquity, 10 
Mine own self-love quite contrary I read ; 
Self so self-loving were iniquity. 
'Tis thee, myself, tliat for myself I praise, 
Painting my age with beauty of thy days. 

63 

Against my love shall be, as I am now, / 

With Time's injurious hand crush'd and o'erworn ; 
When hours have drain'd his blood and fill'd his 

brow 
With lines and wrinkles; when his youthful morn 
Hath travell'd on to age's steepy night, 5 

And all those beauties whereof now he's king 
Are vanishing or vanish'd out of sight, 
Stealing away the treasure of his spring ; 
For such a time do I now fortify 
Against confounding age's cruel knife, 10 

That he shall never cut from memory 
My sweet love's beauty, though my lover's life ; 



404 



SONNETS 



[Son. 63-71, 



His beauty shall in these black lines be seen, 
_ And they shall live, and he in them still green. 

64 

When I have seen by Time's fell hand defaced 
The rich-proud cost of outworn buried age; 
When sometime lofty towers I see down-razed, 
And brass eternal slave to mortal rage ; 
When I have seen the hungry ocean gain 5 

Advantage on tlie kingdom of the shore. 
And the firm soil win of the watery main, 
Increasing store with loss and loss with store ; 
When I have seen such interchange of state, 
Or state itself confounded to decay ; 10 

Ruin hath taught me thus to ruminate, 
That Time will come and take my love away. 
This thought is as a death, which cannot choose 
But weep to have that which it fears to lose. 

65 

Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless 

sea, 
But sad mortality o'er-sways their power. 
How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea. 
Whose action is no stronger than a flower? 
O, how shall summer's honey breath hold out 5 
Against the wreckful siege of battering days. 
When rocks impregnable are not so stout. 
Nor gates of steel so strong, but Time decays ? 
fearful meditation ! where, alack, 9 

Shall Time's best jewel from Time's chest lie hid ? 
Or what strong hand can hold his swift foot back ? 
Or who his spoil of beauty can forbid? 
O, none, unless this miracle have might. 
That in black ink m y love may still sh ine brigh t. 

66 

Tired with all these, for restful death I cry. 
As, to behold desert a beggar born, 
And needy nothing trimm'd in jollity. 
And purest faith unhappily forsworn, 
And gilded honour shamefully misplaced, 5 

And maiden virtue rudely strumpeted. 
And right perfectiou wrongfully disgraced. 
And strength by limping sway disabled. 
And art made tongue-tied by authority, 
And folly, doctor-like, controlling skill, 10 

And simple truth miscall'd simplicity, 
And captive good attending captain ill ; 
Tired with all these, from these would I be gone. 
Save that, to die, I leave my love alone. 

er 

Ah, wherefore with infection should he live 
And with his presence grace impiety, 
That sin by him advantage should achieve 
And lace itself with his society? 
Why should false painting imitate his cheek, 5 
And steal dead seeing of his living hue? 
Why should poor beauty indirectly seek 
Eoses of shadow, since his rose is true ? 
Why should he live, now Nature bankrupt is, 
Beggar'd of blood to blush through lively veins? 
For she hath no exchequer now but his, 11 

And, proud of many, lives upon his gains. 
O, him she stores, to show what wealth she had 
In days long since, before these last so bad. 



6S 

Thus is his cheek the map of days outworn. 
When beauty lived and died as flowers do now, 
Before these bastard signs of fair were born, 
Or durst inhabit on a living brow ; 
Before the golden tresses of the dead, 5 

The right of sepulchres, were shorn away, 
To live a second life on second head ; 
Ere beauty's dead fleece made another gay ; 
In him tliose holy antique hours are seen, 
Without all ornament, itself and true, 10 

Making no summer of another's green, 
Bobbing no old to dress his beauty new; 
And him as for a map doth Nature store. 
To show false Art what beauty was of yore. 



69 

Those parts of thee that the world's eye doth view 
Want nothing that the thought of hearts can 

mend ; 
All tongues, the voice of souls, give thee that due, 
Uttering bare truth, even so as foes commend. 
Thy outward thus with outward praise is crown'd ; 
But those same tongues, that give thee so thine 

own, 6 

In other accents do this praise confound 
By seeing farther than the eye hath shown. 
They look into the beauty of thy mind, 
And that, in guess, they measure by thy deeds; 
Then, churls, their thoughts, although their eyes 

were kind, 11 

To thy fair flower add the rank smell of weeds; 
But why thy odour matcheth not thy show, 
The soil is this, that thou dost common grow. 



That thou art blamed shall not be thy defect. 
For slander's mark was ever yet the fair; 
The ornament of beauty is suspect, 
A crow that flies in heaven's sweetest air. 
So thou be good, slander doth but approve 5 

Thy worth the greater, being woo'd of time; 
For canker vice the sweetest buds doth love. 
And thou present'st a pure unstained prime. 
Thou hast pass'd by the ambush of j^oung days. 
Either not assail'd, or victor being charged ; 10 
Yet this thy praise cannot be so thy praise. 
To tie up envy evermore enlarged ; 
If some suspect of ill mask'd not thy show, 
Theu thou alone kingdoms of hearts shouldst 
owe. 



No longer mourn for me when I am dead 
Than you shall hear the surly sullen bell 
Give warning to the world that I am fled 
From this vile world, with vilest worms to dwell; 
Nay, if you read this line, remember not 5 

The hand that writ it; for I love you so. 
That I in your sweet thoughts would be forgot. 
If thinking on me then should make you woe. 
0, if, I say, you look upon this verse 9 

When I perhaps compounded am with clay, 
Do not so much as my poor name rehearse. 
But let your love even with my life decay; 
Lest the wise world should look into your moan, 
And mock you with me after I am gone. 



Son. 72-80.] 



SONNETS 



405 



O, lest the world should task you to recite 
What merit lived in me, that you should love 
After my death, dear love, forget me quite, 
For you in me can nothing worthy prove; 
Unless you would devise some virtuous lie, 5 

To do more for me than mine own desert, 
And hang more praise upon deceased I 
Than niggard truth would willingly impart ; 
O, lest your true love may seem false in this. 
That you for love speak well of me untrue, 10 
My name be buried where my body is, 
And live no more to shame nor me nor you. 
For I am shamed by that which I bring forth, 
And so should you, to love things nothing worth. 



That time of year thou mayst in me behold 
When yellow leaves, or none, or few, do hang 
Upon those boughs which shake against the cold, 
Bare ruin'd choirs, where late the sweet birds sang. 
In me thou see'st the twilight of such day 

As after sunset fadetli in the west ; 
Which by and by black night doth take away. 
Death's second self that seals up all in rest. 
In me thou see'st the glowing of such fire. 
That on the ashes of his youth doth lie, ' 10 

As the death-bed whereon it must expire. 
Consumed with that which it was nourish'd by. 

This thou perceivest, which makes thy love 
more strong, 

To love that well which thou must leave ere long. 

But be contented ; when that fell arrest 
Without all bail shall carry me away. 
My life hath in this line some interest. 
Which for memorial still with thee shall stay. 
When thou reviewest this, thou dost review 5 
The very part was consecrate to thee ; 
The earth can have but earth, which is his due; 
My spirit is thine, the better part of me ; 
So then thou hast but lost the dregs of life, 
The prey of worms, my body being dead; 10 

The coward conquest of a wretch's knife. 
Too base of thee to be remembered. 
The worth of that is that which it contains, 
And that is this, and this with thee remains. 

■To 

So are you to my thoughts as food to life. 

Or as sweet-season'd showers are to the ground ; 

And for the peace of you I hold such strife 

As 'twixt a miser and his wealth is found ; 

Now proud as an enjoyer, and anon 5 

Doubting the filching age will steal his treasure ; 

Now counting best to be with you alone. 

Then better'd that the world may see my pleasure ; 

Sometime all full with feasting on your sight. 

And by and by clean starved for a look ; 10 

Possessing or pursuing no delight. 

Save what is had or must from you be took. 

Thus do I pine and surfeit day by day, 

Or gluttoning on all, or all away. 

76 

Why is my verse so barren of new pride. 

So far from variation or quick change ? 

Why with the time do I not glance aside 

To new-found methods and to comjjounds strange ? 



Why write I still all one, ever the same, 5 

And keep invention in a noted weed. 
That every word doth almost tell my name. 
Showing their birth and where they did proceed? 
O, know, sweet love, I always write of you. 
And you and love are still my argument ; 10 

So all my best is dressing old words new, 
Spending again what is already spent ; 
For as the sun is daily new and old, 
So is my love still telling what is told. 



Thy glass will show thee how thy beauties wear, 
Thy dial how thy precious minutes waste ; 
The vacant leaves thy mind's imprint will bear, 
And of this book this learning mayst thou taste. 
The wrinkles which thy glass will truly show 5 
Of mouthed graves will give thee memory ; 
Thou by thy dial's shady stealth mayst know 
Time's thievish progress to eternity. 
Look, what thy memory cannot contain 
Commit to these waste blanks, and thou shalt find 
Those children nursed, deliver'd from thy brain. 
To take a new acquaintance of thy mind. 12 

These offices, so oft as thou wilt look. 
Shall profit thee and much enrich thy book. 



So oft have I invoked thee for my Muse 
And found such fair assistance in my verse 
As every alisn pen hath got my use 
And under thee their poesy disperse. 
Thine eyes, that taught the dumb on high to sing 
And heavy ignorance aloft to fly, 6 

Have added feathers to the learned's wing 
And given grace a double majesty. 
Yet be most proud of that which I compile, 
Whose influence is thine and born of thee ; 10 
In others' works thou dost but mend the style. 
And arts with thy sweet graces graced be ; 
But thou art all my art, and dost advance 
As high as learning my rude ignorance. 

■79 

Whilst I alone did call upon thy aid, 
My verse alone had all thy gentle grace; 
But now my gracious numbers are decay'd. 
And my sick Muse doth give another place. 
I grant, sweet love, thy lovely argument 5 

Deserves the travail of a worthier pen ; 
Yet what of thee thy poet doth invent 
He robs thee of, and pays it thee again. 
He lends thee virtue, and he stole that word 
From thy behaviour; beauty doth he give, 10 
And found it in thy cheek ; he can aftbrd 
No praise to thee but what in thee doth live. 
Then thank him not for that which he doth say. 
Since what he owes thee thou thyself dost pay. 

SO 
0, how I faint when I of you do write, 
KuowiDg a better spirit doth use your name, 
And in the praise thereof spends all his might. 
To make me tongue-tied, speaking of your fame ! 
But since your worth, wide as the ocean is, 5 

The humble as the proudest sail doth bear. 
My saucy bark, inferior far to his, ■ 
On your broad main doth wilfully appear. 



406 



SONNETS 



[Son. 80-88. 



Your shallowest help will hold me up afloat, 
Whilst he upon your soundless deep doth ride; 
Or, being wreck'd, I am a worthless boat, 11 

He of tall building and of goodly pride; 
Then if he thrive and I be cast away. 
The worst was this ; my love was my decay. 

81 
Or I shall live your epitaph to make. 
Or you survive when I in earth am rotten ; 
From hence your memory death cannot take, 
Although in me each part will be forgotten. 4 
Your name from hence immortal life shall have, 
Though I, once gone, to all the world must die ; 
The eartli can yield rue but a common grave. 
When you entombed in men's eyes shall lie. 
Your monument shall be my gentle verse, 
AVhich eyes not yet created shall o'er-read ; 10 
And tongues to be your being shall rehearse, 
When all the breathers of this world are dead ; 
You still shall live, — such virtue hath my pen, — 
Where breath most breathes, even in the mouths 
of men. 

8S 
I grant thou wert not married to my Muse, 
And therefore mayst without attaint o'erlook 
The dedicated words which writers use 
Of their fair subject, blessing every book. 
Thou art as fair in knowledge as in hue, 5 

Finding thy worth a limit past my praise; 
And therefore art enforced to seek anew 
Some fresher stamp of the time-bettering days. 
And do so, love; yet when they have devised 
What strained touches rhetoric can lend, 10 

Thou truly fair wert truly sympathized 
In true plain words by thy true-telling friend; 
And their gross painting might be better used 
Where cheeks need blood; in thee it is abused. 

83 

I never saw that you did painting need. 
And therefore to your fair no painting set ; 
I found, or thought I found, you did exceed 
The barren tender of a poet's debt; 
And therefore have I slept in your report, n 

That you yourself, being extant, well might show 
How far a modern quill doth come too short. 
Speaking of worth, what worth in you doth grow. 
This silence for my sin you did impute. 
Which shall be most my glory, being dumb ; 10 
For I impair not beauty being mute. 
When others would give life and bring a tomb. 
There lives more life in one of your fair eyes 
Than both your poets can in praise devise. 

84 
Who is it that says most ? which can say more 
Than this rich praise, that you alone are you? 
In whose confine immured is the store 
Which should example where your equal grew. 
Lean penury within that pen doth dwell 5 

That to his subject lends not some small glory ; 
But he that writes of you, if he can tell 
That you are you, so dignifiies his story, 
Let him but copy what in you is writ. 
Not making worse what nature made so clear, 
And sucli a counterpart shall fame his wit, 11 
Making his style admired every where. 



Yovi to your beauteous blessings add a curse. 
Being fond on praise, which makes your praises 
worse. 

83 
My tongue-tied Muse in maaners holds her still. 
While comments of your praise, richly compiled, 
Eeserve their character with golden quill. 
And precious phrase by all the Muses filed. 
I think good thoughts, whilst other write good 
words, 5 

And, like unletter'd clerk, still cry 'Amen' 
To every hymn that able spirit aflfords. 
In polish'd form of well refined pen. 
Hearing you praised, I say ' 'Tis so, 'tis true,' 
And to the most of praise add something more ; 
But that is in my thought, whose love to you, 11 
Though words come hindmost, holds his rank 
before. 
Then others for the breath of words respect, 
Me for my dumb thoughts, speaking in effect. 

86 

Was it the proud full sail of his great verse, 
Bound for the prize of all too precious you. 
That did my ripe thoughts in my brain inhearse, 
Making their tomb the womb wherein they grew? 
Was it his spirit, by spirits taught to write 5 

Above a mortal pitch, that struck me dead? 
No, neither he, nor his compeers by night 
Giving him aid my verse astonished. 
He, nor that affable familiar ghost 
Which nightly gulls him with intelligence. 
As victors, of my silence cannot boast; 11 

I was not sick of any fear from thence ; 
But when your countenance flll'd up his line. 
Then lack'd I matter; that enfeebled mine. 

8'?' 
Farewell ! thou art too dear for my possessing, 
And like enough thou know'st thy estimate; 
The charter of thy worth gives thee releasing ; 
My bonds in thee are all determinate. 4 

For how do I hold thee but by thy granting 7 
And for that riches where is my deserving? 
The cause of this fair gift in me is wanting. 
And so my patent back again is swerving. 
Thyself thou gavest, thy own worth then not 
knowing, 9 

Or me, to whom thou gavest it, else mistaking; 
So thy great gift, upon misprision growing, 
Comes home again, on better judgement making. 
Thus have I had thee, as a dream doth flatter, 
In sleep a king, but waking no such matter. 

88 
When thou shalt be disposed to set me light, 
Aud place my merit in the eye of scorn 
Upon thy side against myself I'll fight. 
And prove thee virtuous, though thou art for- 
sworn. 
With mine own weakness being best acquainted. 
Upon thy part I can set down a story 6 

Of faults conceal'd, wherein I am attainted ; 
That thou in losing me shalt win much glory; 
And I by this will be a gainer too ; 
For bending all my loving thoughts on thee, 
The injuries that to myself I do, 11 

Doing thee vantage, double-vantage me. 



Son. S8-97.] 



SONNETS 



407 



Such is my love, to thee I so belong, 

That for thy right myself will bear all wrong. 

89 

Say that thou didst forsake me for some fault. 
And I will comment upon that offence ; 
Speak of ray lameness, and I straight will halt, 
Against thy reasons making no defence. 
Thou canst not, love, disgrace me half so ill, 
To set a form upon desired change, 6 

As I'll myself disgrace; knowing thy will, 
I will acquaintance strangle and look strange; 
Be absent from thy walks ; and in ray tongue 
Thy sweet beloved name no more shall dwell, 
Lest I, too much profane, should do it wrong. 
And haply of our old acquaintance tell. 12 

For thee, against myself I'll vow debate. 
For I must ne'er love him whom thou dost hate. 

90 

Then hate me when thou wilt ; if ever, now ; 
Now, while the world is bent my deeds to cross. 
Join with the spite of fortune, make me bow, 
And do not drop in for an after-loss ; 
Ah, do not, when my heart hath 'scaped this sor- 
row, 5 
Come in the rearward of a conquered woe ; 
Give not a windy night a rainy morrow, 
To linger out a purposed overthrow. 
If thou wilt leave me, do not leave me last. 
When other petty griefs have done their spite, 
But in the onset come ; so shall I taste 11 
At first the very worst of fortune's might; 
And other strains of woe, which now seem woe, 
Compared with loss of thee will not seem so. 

91 

Some glory in their birth, some in their skill, 
Some in their wealth, some in their body's force ; 
Some in their garments, though new-fangled ill ; 
Some in their hawks and hounds, some in their 

horse ; 
And every humour hath his adjunct pleasure, 
AVherein it finds a joy above the rest ; 6 

But these particulars are not my measure ; 
All these I better in one general best. 
Thy love is better than high birth to me, 
, Eicher than wealth, prouder than garments' cost. 
Of more delight than hawks or horses be; 11 
And having thee, of all men's pride I boast ; 
Wretched in this alone, that thou ma3'st take 
All this away and me most wretched make. 



But do thy worst to steal thyself away, 
For term of life thou art assured mine ; 
■ And life no longer than thy love will stay, 
For it depends upon that love of thine. 
Then need I not to fear the worst of wrongs, 5 
When in the least of them my life hath end. 
I see a better state to me belongs 
Than that which on thy humour doth depend ; 
Thou canst not vex me with inconstant mind, 
Since that my life on thy revolt doth lie. 10 

O, what a happy title do I find, 
Happy to have thy love, happy to die ! 

But what's so blessed-fair that fears no blot? 

Thou mayst be false, and yet I know it not. 



93 

So shall I live, supposing thou art true. 
Like a deceived husband; so love's face 
May still seem love to me, though alter'd new; 
Thy looks with me, thy heart in other place; 
For there can live no hatred in thine eye, 5 

Therefore in that I cannot know thy change. 
In many's looks the false heart's history 
Is writ in moods and frowns and wrinkles strange. 
But heaven in thy creation did decree 9 

That in thy face sweet love should ever dwell; 
Whate'er thy thoijghts or thy heart's workings be. 
Thy looks should nothing thence but sweetness 
tell. 
How like Eve's apple doth thy beauty grow, 
If thy sweet virtue answer not thy show ! 

94 

They that have power to hurt and will do none, 
That do not do the thing they most do show. 
Who, moving others, are themselves as stone. 
Unmoved, cold, and to temptation slow ; 
They rightly do inherit heaven's graces 5 

And husband nature's riches from expense ; 
They are the lords and owners of their faces, 
Others but stewards of their excellence. 
The summer's flower is to the summer sweet. 
Though to itself it only live and die, 10 

But if that flower with base infection meet. 
The basest weed outbraves his dignity ; 

For sweetest things turn sourest by their deeds ; 

Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds. 

95 

How sweet and lovely dost thou make the shame 
Which, like a canker in the fragrant rose, 
Doth spot the beauty of thy budding name ! 
O, in what sweets dost thou thy sins inclose ! 
That tongue that tells the story of thy days, 5 
Making lascivious comments on thy sport, 
Cannot dispraise but in a kind of praise ; 
Naming thy name blesses an ill report. 
0, what a mansion have those vices got 
Which for their habitation chose out thee, 10 
Where beauty's veil doth cover every blot 
And all things turn to fair that eyes can see ! 

Take heed, dear heart, of this large privilege ; 

The hardest knife ill used doth lose his edge. 

96 

Some say, thy fault is youth, some wantonness ; 
Some say, thy grace is youth and gentle sport ; 
Both grace and faults are loved of more and less; 
Thou makest faults graces that to thee resort. 
As on the finger of a throned queen 5 

The basest jewel will be well esteem'd. 
So are those errors that in thee are seen 
To truths translated and for true things deem'd. 
How many lambs might the stern wolf betray, 
If like a lamb he could his looks translate ! 10 
How many gazers mightst thou lead away, 
If thou wouldst use the strength of all thy state 
But do not so ; I love thee in such sort. 
As thou being mine, mine is thy good report. 

97 

How like a winter hath my absence been 
From thee, the pleasure of the fleeting year! 
What freezings have I felt, what dark days seen ! 
What old December's bareness every where ! 4 



408 



SONNETS 



[Son, 97-105, 



And yet this time removed was summer's time ; 
The teeming autumn, big with rich increase, 
Bearing the wanton burthen of the prime, 
Lilte widow'd wombs after their lord's decease; 
Yet this abundant issue seem'd to me 
But hope of orphans and unfather'd fruit ; 10 
For summer and his pleasures wait on thee, 
And, thou away, the very birds are mute; 
Or, if they sing, 'tis with so dull a cheer 
That leaves look pale, dreading the winter's 
near. 

98 

From you have I been absent in the spring, 
"When proud-pied April, dress'd in all his trim, 
Hath put a spirit of youth in every thing. 
That heavy Saturn laugh'd and leap'd witli him. 
Yet nor the lays of birds, nor the sweet smell 5 
Of different flowers in odour and in hue, 
Could make me any summer's story tell. 
Or from their proud lap pluck them where they 

grew ; 
Nor did I wonder at the lily's white, 
Nor praise the deep vermillion in the rose ; 10 
They were but sweet, but figures of delight. 
Drawn after you, you pattern of all those. 
Yet seem'd it winter still, and, you away. 
As with your shadow I with these did play. 

99 

The forward violet thus did I chide : 

Sweet thief, whence didst thou steal thy sweet 

that smells. 
If not from my love's breath? The purple pride 
Which on thy soft cheek for complexion dwells 
In my love's veins thou hast too grossly dyed. 
The lily I condemned for thy hand, 6 

And buds of marjoram had stol'n thy hair ; 
The roses fearfully on thorns did stand. 
One blushing shame, another white despair; 
A third, nor r(3Q nor white, had stol'n of both, 10 
And to his robbery had annex'd thy breath ; 
But, for his theft, in pride of all his growth 
A vengeful canker eat him up to death. 
More flowers I noted, yet I none could see 
But sweet or colour it had stol'n from thee. 

100 

Wliere art thou, Huse, that thou forget'st so long 
To speak of that which gives thee all thy might? 
Spend'st thou thy fury on some worthless song. 
Darkening thy power to lend base subjects light? 
Eeturu, forgetful Muse, and straight redeem 
In gentle numbers time so idly spent ; 6 

Sing to the ear that doth thy lays esteem 
And gives thy pen both skill and argument. 
Else, resty Muse, my love's sweet face survey. 
If Time have any wrinkle graven there; 10 

If any, be a satire to decay. 
And make Time's spoils despised every where. 

Give my love fame faster than Time wastes life ; 

So thou prevent'st his scythe and crooked knife. 

101 

O truant Muse, what shall be thy amends 
For thy neglect of truth in beauty dyed? 
Both truth and beauty on my love depends ; 
So dost thou too, and therein dignified. 4 



Make answer. Muse ; wilt thou not haply say : 

' Truth needs no colour, with his colour flx'd ; 

Beauty no pencil, beauty's truth to lay ; 

But best is best, if never intermix'd'? 

Because he needs no praise, wilt thou be dumb ? 

Excuse not silence so, for 't lies in thee 10 

To make him much outlive a gilded tomb 

And to be praised of ages yet to be. 
Then do thy office. Muse ; I teach thee how 
To make him seem long hence as he shows now. 

103 

My love is strengthen'd, though more weak in 

seeming; 
I love not less, though less the show appear ; 
That love is merchandized whose rich esteeming 
The owner's tongue doth publish every where. 
Our love was new, and then but in the spring, 5 
When I was wont to greet it with my lays ; 
As Philomel in summer's front doth sing. 
And stops her pipe in. growth of riper days ; 
Not that the summer is less pleasant now 
Than when her mournful hymns did hush the 
night, 10 

Bvit that wild music burthens every bough. 
And sweets grown common lose their dear delight. 
Therefore, like her, I sometime hold my tongue, 
Because I would not dull you with my song. 

103 

Alack, what poverty my :Muse brings forth, 
That having such a scojie to show her pride, 
The argument, all bare, is of more worth 
Than when it hath my added praise beside ! 
O, blame me not, if I no more can write ! 5 

Look in your glass, and there appears a face 
That over-goes my blunt invention quite. 
Dulling my lines and doing me disgrace. 
Were it not sinful then, striving to mend. 
To mar the subject that before was well ? 10 

For to no other pass my verses tend 
Thau of your graces and your gifts to tell ; 
And more, much more, than in my verse can sit, 
Your own glass shows you when you look in it. 

104 

To me, fair friend, you never can be old, 
For as you were when first your eye I eyed. 
Such seems your beauty still. Three winters cold 
Have from the forests shook three summers' pride. 
Three beauteous springs to yellow autumn turn'd 
In process of the seasons have I seen, 6 

Three April perfumes in three hot Junes burn'd, 
Since first I saw you fresh, which yet are green. 
Ah, yet doth beauty, like a dial-hand, 9 

Steal from his figure, and no pace perceived ; 
So your sweet hue, which methinks still doth 

stand. 
Hath motion, and mine eye may be deceived; 
For fear of which, hear this, thou age unbred : 
Ere you were born was beauty's summer dead. 

105 

Let not my love be call'd idolatry, 
Nor my beloved as an idol show. 
Since all alike my songs and praises be 
To one, of one, still such, and ever so. 



Son. 105-113.] 



SONNETS 



409 



Kind is ray love to-day, to-morrow kind, 5 

Still constant in a wondrous excellence ; 
Therefore my verse to constancy confined, 
One thing expressing, leaves out difterence. 
'Fair, kind, and true,' is all my argument, 
' Fair, kind, and true,' varying to other vrords ; 
And in this change is ray invention spent, 11 
Three themes in one, which wondrous scope af- 
fords. 
'Fair, kind, and true,' have often lived alone, 
Which three till now never kept seat in one. 

106 

When in the chronicle of wasted time 
I see descriptions of the fairest wights, 
And beauty making beautiful old rhyme 
In praise of ladies dead and lovely knights. 
Then, in the blazon of sweet beauty's best, 6 
Of hand, of foot, of lip, of eye, of brow, 
I see their antique pen would have express'd 
Even such a beauty as you master now. 
So all their praises are but prophecies 
Of this our time, all you prefiguring; 10 

And, for they look'd but with divining eyes. 
They had not skill enough your worth to sing ; 
For we, which now behold these present days. 
Have eyes to wonder, but lack tongues to praise. 

Not mine own fears, nor the prophetic soul 
Of the wide world dreaming on things to come, 
Can yet the lease of my true love control. 
Supposed as forfeit to a confined doom. 
The mortal moon hath her eclipse endured, 5 
And the sad augurs mock their own presage ; 
Incertainties now crown themselves assured, 
And peace proclaims olives of endless age. 
Now with the drops of this most balmy time 9 
My love looks fresh, and Death to me subscribes. 
Since, spite of him, I'll live in this poor rhyme. 
While he insults o'er dull and speechless tribes ; 
And thou in this shalt find thy monument. 
When tyrants' crests and tombs of brass are 
spent. 

108 » 

What's in the brain, that ink may character. 
Which hath not figured to thee my true spirit? 
What's new to speak, what new to register. 
That may express my love, or thy dear merit? 
Nothing, sweet boy ; but yet, like prayers divine, 
I must each day say o'er the very same; 6 

Counting no old thing old, thou mine, I thine. 
Even as when first I hallow'd thy fair name. 
So that eternal love in love's fresh case 
Weighs not the dust and injury of age, 10 

Nor gives to necessary wrinkles place. 
But makes antiquity for aye his page ; 

Finding the first conceit of love there bred, 
Where time and outward form would show it 
dead. 

109 
O, never saj'' that I was false of heart, 
Though absence seem'd my flame to qualify. 
As easy might I from myself depart 
As from my soul, which in thy breast doth lie; 
That is my home of love ; if I have ranged, 5 
Like him that travels, I return again ; 
Just to the time, not with the time exchanged. 
So that myself bring water for my stain. 



Never believe, though in my nature reign'd 
All frailties that besiege all kinds of blood, 10 
That it could so preposterously be stain'd. 
To leave for nothing all thy sum of good ; 
For nothing this wide universe I call, 
Save thou, my rose ; in it thou art my all. 

110 

Alas, 'tis true I have gone here and there, 

And made myself a motley to the view. 

Gored mine own thoughts, sold cheap what is 

most dear, 
Made old offences of aflfections new ; 
Most true it is that I have look'd on truth 5 

Askance and strangely; but, by all above. 
These blenches gave my heart another youth. 
And worse essays proved thee ray best of love. 
Now all is done, have what shall have no end ; 
Mine appetite I never more will grind 10 

On newer proof, to try an older friend, 
A god in love, to whom I am confined. 

Then give me welcome, next my heaven the 
best. 

Even tQ thy pure and most most loving breast. 

Ill 

O, for my sake do you with Fortune chide. 
The guilty goddess of my harmful deeds. 
That did not better for my life provide 
Than public means which public manners breeds. 
Thence comes it that my name receives a brand. 
And almost thence my nature is subdued 6 

To what it works in, like the dyer's hand ; 
Pity me then and wish I were renew'd ; 
Whilst, like a willing patient, I will drink 
Potions of eisel 'gainst my strong infection; 10 
No bitterness that I will bitter think. 
Nor double penance, to correct correction. 
Pity me then, dear friend, and I assure ye 
Even that your pity is enough to cure me. 

113 

Your love and pity doth the impression fill 
Which vulgar scandal stamp'd upon my brow ; 
For what care I who calls me well or ill, 
So you o'er-green my bad, my good allow ? 
You are my all the world, and I must strive 5 
To know my shames and praises from your 

tongue ; 
None else to me, nor I to none alive. 
That my steel'd sense or changes right or wrong. 
In so profound abysm I throw all care 
Of others' voices, that my adder's sense 10 

To critic and to flatterer stopped are. 
Mark how with my neglect I do dispense : 
You are so strongly in my purpose bred 
That all the world besides methiuks are dead. 

113 

Since I left you mine eye is in my mind. 
And that which governs me lo go about 
Doth part his function and is partly blind, 
Seems seeing, but effectually is out ; 
For it no form delivers to the heart 5 

Of bird, of flower, or shape, which it doth latch; 
Of his quick objects hath the mind no part. 
Nor his own vision holds what it doth catch ; 



410 



SONNETS 



[Son. 113-121. 



For if it see the rudest or gentlest sight, 
The most sweet favour or deformed'st creature, 
The mountain or the sea, the day or night, 11 
The crow or dove, it shapes them to your feature ; 
Incapable of more, replete with you. 
My most true mind thus maketh mine untrue. 

114 

Or whether doth my mind, being crown'd with 

you. 
Drink up the monarch's plague, this flattery 7 
Or whether shall I say, miine eye saith true, 
And that your love taught it this alchemy, 
To make of monsters and things indigest 5 

Such cherubins as your sweet self resemble, 
Creating every bad a perfect best, 
As fast as objects to his beams assemble? 
O, 'tis the first; 'tis flattery in my seeing, 9 

And my great mind most kingly drinks it up ; 
Mine eye well knows what with his gust is 'gree- 

And to his palate doth prepare the cup; 
If it be poison'd, 'tis the lesser sin 
That mine eye loves it and doth first begin. 

115 

Those lines that I before have writ do lie, 
Even those that said I could not love you dearer ; 
Yet then my judgement knew no reason why 
My most full flame should afterwards burn clearer. 
But reckoning Time, whose million'd accidents 5 
Creep iu'twixt vows, and change decrees of kings. 
Tan sacred beauty, blunt the sharp's! intents. 
Divert strong minds to the course of altering 

things ; 
Alas, why, fearing of Time's tyranny. 
Might I not then say ' Now I love you best,' 10 
When I was certain o'er incertainty, 
Crowning the present, doubting of the rest? 
Love is a babe ; then might I not saj' so. 
To give full growth to that which still doth 
grow? 

lie 

Let me not to the marriage of true minds 

Admit impediments. Love is not love 

Which alters when it alteration finds. 

Or bends with the remover to remove ; 

O, no ! it is an ever-fixed mark, 5 

That looks on tempests and is never shaken; 

It is the star to every wandering bark. 

Whose worth's unknown, although his height be 

taken. 
Love's not Time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks 
Within his bending sickle's compass come ; 10 
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks, 
But bears it out even to the edge of doom. 
If this be error and upon me proved, 
I never writ, nor no man ever loved. 

117" 

Accuse me thus : that I have scanted all 
Wherein I should your great deserts repay. 
Forgot upon your dearest love to call. 
Whereto all bonds do tie me day by day ; 4 

That I have frequent been with unknown minds, 
And given to time your own dear-purchased right ; 
That I have hoisted sail to all the winds 
Which sliould transport me farthest from your 
sight. 



Book both my wilfulness and errors down. 
And on just proof surmise accumulate ; 10 

Bring me within the level of your frown. 
But shoot not at me in j'our waken'd hate ; 
Since my appeal says I did strive to prove 
The constancy and virtue of your love. 

118 

Like as, to make our appetites more keen, 
With eager compounds we our palate urge ; 
As, to prevent our maladies unseen, 
We sicken to shun sickness when we purge ; 
Even so, being full of your ne'er-cloying sweet- 
ness, o 
To bitter sauces did I frame my feeding; 
And sick of welfare found a kind of meetness 
To be diseased, ere that there was true needing. 
Thus policy in love, to anticipate 
The ills that were not, grew to faults assured. 
And brought to medicine a healthful state, 11 
Which, rank of goodness, would by ill be cured; 
But thence I learn, and find the lesson true, 
Drugs poison him that so fell sick of you. 

119 

What potions have I drunk of Siren tears, 
Distill'd from limbecks foul as hell within. 
Applying fears to hopes and hopes to fears. 
Still losing when I saw mj'self to win ! 4 

What wretched errors hath my heart committed, 
WhUst it hath thought itself so blessed never! 
How ^have mine eyes out of their spheres been 

fitted. 
In the distraction of this madding fever! 
benefit of ill ! now I find true 
That better is by evil still made better; 10 

And ruin'd love, when it is built anew. 
Grows fairer than at first, more sti'ong, far greater. 
So I return rebuked to mj' content, 
And gained by ill thrice more than I have spent, 

ISO 

That you were once unkind befriends me now, 
And for that sorrow which I then did feel 
Needs must I under my transgression bow. 
Unless my nerves were brass or hammer'd steel. 
For if you were by my unkindness shaken, 5 
As I by yours, you've pass'd a hell of time; 
And I, a tyrant, have no leisure taken 
To weigh how once I suffer'd in your crime. 
O, that our night of woe might have remember'd 
My deepest sense, how hard true sorrow hits, 10 
And soon to you, as you to me, then tender'd 
The humble salve which wounded bosoms fits! 

But that your trespass now becomes a fee; 

Mine ransoms yours, and yours must ransom 
me. 

121 ' 

'Tis better to be vile than vile esteemed, 
When not to be receives reproach of being ; 
And the just pleasure lost, which is so deemed 
Not by our feeling, but by others' seeing; 
For why should others' false adulterate eyes 5 
Give salutation to my sportive blood ? 
Or on my frailties why are frailer spies, 
Which in their wills count bad what I think 
good? 



Son. 121-129.] 



SONNETS 



411 



No, I am that I am, and they that level 

At my abuses reckon up their own ; 10 

I may be straight, though they themselves be 

■ bevel ; 
By their rank thoughts my deeds must not be 
shown ; 
Unless this general evil they maintain. 
All men are bad and in their badness reign. 

132 

Thy gift, thy tables, are within my brain 
Full charactered with lasting memory. 
Which shall above that idle rank remain, 
Beyond all date, even to eternity ; 
Or, at the least, so long as brain and heart 5 

Have faculty by nature to subsist ; 
Till each to razed oblivion yield his part 
Of thee, thy record never can be mlss'd. 
That poor retention could not so much hold, 
Nor need I tallies tliy dear love to score ; 10 

Therefore to give them from me was I bold, 
To trust those tables that receive. thee more; 
To keep an adjunct to remember thee 
•Were to import forgetfulness in me. 

1Q3 

No, Time, thou shalt not boast that I do change ; 
Thy pyramids built up with newer might 
To me are nothing novel, nothing strange ; 
They are but dressings of a former sight. 
Our dates are brief, and therefore we admire 
What thou dost foist upon us that is old ; 6 

And rather make them born to our desire 
Than think that we before have heard them told. 
Thy registers and thee I both defy. 
Not wondering at the present nor the past, 10 
For thy records and what we see doth lie, 
Made more or less by thy continual haste. 
This I do vow, and this shall ever be, 
I will be true, despite thy scythe and thee. 

134 

If my dear love were but the child of state, 
It might for Fortune's bastard be unfather'd, 
As subject to Time's love or to Time's hate, 
Weeds among weeds, or flowers with flowers 

gather'd. 
No, it was builded far from accident ; 5 

It suffers not in smiling pomp, nor falls 
Under the blow of thralled discontent. 
Whereto th' inviting time our fashion calls ; 
It fears not policj', that heretic. 
Which works on leases of short-number'd hours. 
But all alone stands hugely politic, 11 

That it nor grows with heat nor drowns with 

showers. 
To this I witness call the fools of time, 
Which die for goodness, who have lived for 

crime. 

135 
Were 't aught to me I bore the canopy, 
With my extern the outward honouring, 
Or laid great bases for eternity. 
Which prove more short than waste or ruining? 
Have I not seen dwellers on form and favour 5 
Lose all, and more, by paying too much rent. 
For compound sweet foregoing simple savour. 
Pitiful thrivers, in their gazing spent? 



No, let me be obsequious in thy heart, 
And take thou my oblation, poor but free, 10 
Which is not mix'd with seconds, knows no art 
But mutual render, only me for thee. 
Hence, thou suborn'd informer ! a true soul 
When most impeach'd stands least in thy con- 
trol. 

136 

O thou, my lovely boy, who in thy power 
Dost hold Time's fickle glass, his sickle, hour; 
Who hast by waning grown, and therein show'st 
Thy lovers withering as thy sweet self grow'st ; 
If Nature, sovereign mistress over wrack, 5 

As thou goest onwards, still will pluck thee back, 
She keeps thee to tliis purpose, that her skill 
May time disgrace and wretched minutes kill. 
Yet fear her, O thou minion of her pleasure ! 
She may detain, but not still keep, her treasure ; 
Her audit, though delay'd, answer'd must be. 
And her quietus is lo render thee. 12 

isr 

In the old age black was not counted fair. 
Or if it were, it bore not beauty's name ; 
But now is black beauty's successive heir. 
And beauty slander'd with a bastard shame ; 4 
For since each hand hath put on nature's power, 
Fairing the foul with art's false borrow'd face, 
Sweet beauty hath no name, no holy bower, 
But is profaned, if not lives in disgrace. 
Therefore my mistress' eyes are raven black, 
Her eyes so suited, and they mourners seem 
At such who, not born fair, no beauty lack, 11 
Slandering creation with a false esteem ; 
Yet so they mourn, becoming of their woe, 
That every tongue says beauty should look so. 

138 

How oft, when thou, my music, music play'st. 

Upon that blessed wood whose motion sounds 

With thy sweet fingers, when thou gently sway'st 

The wiry concord that mine ear confounds. 

Do I envy those jacks that nimble leap 5 

To kiss the tender inward of thy hand. 

Whilst my poor lips, which should that harvest 

reap. 
At the wood's boldness by thee blushing stand ! 
To be so tickled, they would change their state 
And situation with those dancing chips, 10 

O'er whom thy fingers walk with gentle gait. 
Making dead wood more blest than living lips. 
Since saucy jacks so happy are in this, 
Give them thy fingers, me thy lips to kiss. 

139 

The expense of spirit in a waste of shame 

Is lust in action ; and till action, lust 

Is perjured, murderous, bloody, full of blame, 

Savage, extreme, rude, cruel, not to trust ; 

Enjoy'd no sooner but despised straight ; 5 

Past reason hunted ; and no sooner had. 

Past reason hated, as a swallow'd bait. 

On purpose laid to make the taker mad ; 

Mad in pursuit, and in possession so ; 

Had, having, and in quest to have, extreme; 

A bliss in proof, and proved, a very woe; 11, 

Before, a joy proposed ; behind, a dream. 



412 



SONNETS 



[Son. 129-137. 



All this the world well knows; yet none knows 

well 
To shun the heaven that leads men to this hell. 

130 

My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun ; 

Coral is far more red than her lips' red ; 

If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun ; 
■ If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head. 

I have seen roses damask'd red and white, 5 

But no such roses see I in her cheeks ; 

And in some perfumes is there more delight 

Than in the breath that from my mistress reeks. 

I love to hear her speak, yet well I know 

That music hath a far more pleasing sound; 10 

I grant I never saw a goddess go, 

My mistress, when she walks, treads on the 
ground ; 
And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare 
As any she belied with false compare. 

131 

Thou art as tyrannous, so as thou art. 
As those whose beauties proudly make them cruel ; 
For well thou know'st to my dear doting heart 
Thou art the fairest and most precious jewel. 
Yet, in good faith, some say that thee behold, 5 
Thy face hath not the power to make love groan ; 
To say they err I dare not be so bold. 
Although I swear it to myself alone. 
And to be sure that is not false I swear, 
A thousand groans, but thinking on thy face. 
One on another's neck, do witness bear 11 

Thy black is fairest in my judgement's place. 
In nothing art thou black save in thy deeds. 
And thence this slander, as I think, proceeds. 

132 

Thine eyes I love, and they, as pitying me, 
Knowing thy heart torments me with disdain. 
Have put on black and loving mourners be. 
Looking with pretty ruth upon my pain. 
And truly not the morning sun of heaven 5 

Better becomes the grey cheeks of the east. 
Nor that full star that ushers in the even 
Doth half that glory to the sober west. 
As those two mourning eyes become thy face; 
O, let it then as well beseem thy heart 10 

To mourn for me, since mourning doth thee grace. 
And suit thy pity like in every part. 
Then will I swear beauty herself is black. 
And aD they foul that thy complexion lack. 

133 

Beshrew that heart that makes my heart to groan 
For that deep wound it gives my friend and me ! 
Is't not enough to torture me alone. 
But slave to slavery my sweet'st friend must be ? 
Me from myself thy cruel eye hath taken, 5 

And my next self thou harder hast engrossed ; 
Of him, myself, and thee, I am forsaken ; 
A torment thrice threefold thus to be crossed. 
Prison my heart in thy steel bosom's ward. 
But then my friend's heart let my poor heart bail ; 
Whoe'er keeps me, let my heart be his guard ; 11 
Thou canst not then use rigour in my gaol ; 
And yet thou wilt ; for I, being pent in thee, 
Perforce am thine, and all that is in me. 



134= 

So, now I have confess'd that he is thine 

And I myself am mortgaged to thy will, 

Myself I'll forfeit, so that other mine 

Thou wilt restore, to be my comfort still ; 

But thou wilt not, nor he will not be free, 5 

For thou art covetous and he is kind ; 

He learn'd but surety-like to write for me. 

Under that bond that him as fast doth bind. 

The statute of thy beauty thou wilt take, 

Thou usurer, that put'st forth all to use, 10 

And sue a friend came debtor for my sake; 

So him I lose through my unkind abuse. 

Him have I lost ; thou hast both him and me ; 

He pays the whole, and yet am I not free. 



135 

Whoever hath her wish, thou hast thy 'Will,' 
And 'Will' to boot, and 'Will' in overplus; 
JNIore than enough am I that vex thee still, 
To thy sweet will making addition thus. 
Wilt thou, whose will is large and spacious, 5 
Not once vouchsafe to hide my will in thine? 
Shall will in others seem right gracious. 
And in my will no fair acceptance shine? 
The sea, all water, yet receives rain still, 
And ia abundance addeth to his store ; 10 

So thou, being rich in ' Will,' add to thy ' Will ' 
One will of mine, to make thy large ' Will' more. 

Let no unkind, no fair beseechers kill ; 

Think all but one, and me in that one ' Will. 



If thy soul check thee that I come so near. 
Swear to thy blind soul that I was thy ' Will,' 
And will, thy soul knows, is admitted there ; 
Thus far for love, my love-suit, sweet, fulfil. 
' Will' will fulfil the treasure of thy love, 5 

Ay, fill it full with wills, and my will one. 
In things of great receipt with ease we prove 
Among a number one is reckon'd none ; 
Then in the number lot me pass untold. 
Though in thy stores' account I one must be; 
For nothing hold me, so it please thee hold 11 
That nothing me, a something sweet to thee; 
Make but my name thy love, and love that still, 
And then thou lovest me, for my name is ' Will.' 



isr 

Thou blind fool, Love, what dost thou to mine eyes, 
That they behold, and see not what they see? 
They know what beauty is, see where it lies, 
Yet what the best is take the worst to be. 
If eyes, corrupt by over-partial looks, 5 

Be anchor'd in the bay where all men ride. 
Why of eyes' falsehood hast thou forged hooks, 
Whereto the judgement of mj' heart is tied? 
Why should my heart think that a several plot 
Which my heart knows the wide world's common 
place? 10 

Or mine eyes seeing this, say this is not, 
To put fair truth ujion so foul a face? 
In things right true my heart and eyes have 

erred. 
And to this false plague are they now trans- 
ferred. 



Son 138-146.] 



SONNETS 



413 



138 

When my love swears that she is made of truth, 
I do believe her, though I know she lies, 
That she might think me some untutor'd youth, 
Unlearned in the world's false subtleties. 
Thus vainly thinking that she thinks me young. 
Although she knows my days are past the best. 
Simply I credit her false-speaking tongue ; 7 

On both sides thus is simple truth supprest. 
But wher-efore says she not she is unjust? 
And wherefore say not I that I am old ? ' 10 

O, love's best habit is in seeming trust, 
And age in love loves not to have years told ; 
Therefore I lie with her and she with me, 
And in our faults by lies we flatter'd be. 

139 

O, call not me to justify the wrong 

That thy unkindness lays upon ury heart ; 

Wound me not with thine eye, but with thy 

tongue; 
Use power with power, and slay me not by art. 
Tell me thou lovest elsewhere; but in my sight, 
Dear heart, forbear to glance thine eye aside ; 6 
What need'st thou wound with cunning, when 

thy might 
Is more than my o'er-press'd defence can bide? 
Let me excuse thee: ah, my love well knows 
Her pretty looks have been mine enemies ; 10 
And therefore from my face she turns my foes, 
That they elsewhere might dart their injuries ; 
Yet do not so ; but since I am near slain, 
Kill me outright with looks, and rid my pain. 

140 

Be wise as thou art cruel ; do not press 
My tongue-tied patience with too much disdain ; 
Lest sorrow lend me words, and words express 
The manner of my pity-wanting pain. 
If I might teach thee wit, better it were, 5 

Though not to love, yet, love, to tell me so; 
As testy sick men, when their deaths be near, 
No news but health from their physicians know; 
For, if I should despair, I should grow mad. 
And in my madness might speak ill of thee; 
Now this ill-wresting world is grown so bad, 
Mad slanderers by mad ears believed be. 12 

That I may not be so, nor thovi belied. 
Bear thine eyes straight, though thy proud 
heart go wide. 

141 

In faith, I do not love thee with mine eyes, 
For they in thee a thousand errors note; 
But 'tis my heart that loves what they despise. 
Who, in despite of view, is pleased to dote; 
Nor are mine ears with thy tongue's tune de- 
lighted ; 5 
Nor tender feeling, to base touches prone. 
Nor taste, nor smell, desire to be invited 
To any sensual feast with thee alone ; 
But my five wits nor my five senses can 9 
Dissuade one foolish heart from serving thee, 
Who leaves unsway'd the likeness of a man. 
Thy proud heart's slave and vassal wretch to be ; 
Only my plague thus far I count my gain. 
That she that makes me sin awards me pain. 



143 

Love is my sin, and thy dear virtue hate, 
Hate of my sin, grounded on sinful loving; 
O, but with mine compare thou thine own state. 
And thou shalt find il merits not reproving; 
Or, if it do, not from those lips of thine, 5 

That have jirofaned their scarlet ornaments 
And seal'd false bonds of love as oft as mine, 
Eobb'd others' beds' revenues of their rents. 
Be it lawful I love thee, as thou lovest those 
Whom thine eyes woo as mine importune thee ; 
Root pity in thy heart, that, when it grows, 
Thy pity may deserve to pitied be. 12 

If thou dost seek to have what thou dost hide, 
By self-example mayst thou be denied ! 

143 

Lo, as a careful housewife runs to catch 
One of her feather'd creatures broke away, 
Sets down her babe, and makes all swift dispatch 
In pursuit of the thing she would have stay ; 
Whilst her neglected child holds her in chase. 
Cries to catch her whose busy care is bent 6 

To follow that which flies before her face. 
Not prizing her poor infant's discontent ; 
So runn'st thou after that which flies from thee, 
Whilst I thy babe chase thee afar behind ; 10 

But if thou catch thy hope, turn back to me. 
And play the mother's part, kiss me, be kind; 
So will I pray that thou mayst have thy ' Will,' 
If thou turn back and my loud crying still. 

144 

Two loves I have of comfort and despair, 
Which like two spirits do suggest me still ; 
The better angel is a man right fair. 
The worser spirit a woman colour'd ill. 
To win me soon to hell, my female evil 5 

Tempteth my better angel from my side. 
And would corrupt my saint to be a devil, 
Wooing his purity with her foul pride. 
And whether that my angel be turn'd fiend 
Suspect I may, yet not directly tell ; 10 

But being both from me, both to each friend, 
I guess one angel in another's hell ; 
Yet this shall I ne'er know, but live in doubt, 
Till my bad angel fire my good one out. 

14S 

Those lips that Love's own hand did make 

Breathed forth the sound that said ' I hate,' 

To me that lauguish'd for her sake ; 

But when she saw my woeful state. 

Straight in her heart did mercy come, 6 

Chiding that tongue that ever sweet 

Was used in giving gentle doom ; 

And taught it thus anew to greet ; 

'I hate' she alter'd with an end. 

That foUow'd it as gentle day 10 

Doth follow night, who, like a fiend, 

From heaven to hell is flown away ; 
'I hate' from hate away she threw. 
And saved my life, saying ' not you.' 

146 

Poor soul, the centre of my sinful earth. 
My sinful earth these rebel powers that thee ar- 
ray, 
Why dost thou pine within and suffer dearth, 
Painting thy outward walls so costly gay? 



414 



SONNETS 



[Son 146-154. 



Why so large cost, having so short a lease, 5 

Dost thou upon thy fading mansion spend? 
Shall worms, inheritors of this excess, 
Eat up thy charge? is this thy body's end? 
Then, soul, live thou upon thy servant's loss, 
And let that pine to aggravate thy store ; 10 

Buy terms divine in selling hours of dross ; 
Within be fed, without be rich no more ; 

So Shalt thou feed on Death, that feeds on men. 

And Death once dead, there's no more dying 
then. 

X4=7' 
My love is as a fever, longing still 
For that which longer nurseth the disease; 
Feeding on that which doth preserve the ill, 
The uncertain sickly appetite to please. 
My reason, the physician to my love, 5 

Angry that his prescriptions are not kept, 
Hath left me, and I desperate now approve 
Desire is death, which physic did excejat. 
Past cure I am, now reason is past care, 
And frantic-mad with evermore unrest; 10 

My thoughts and my discourse as madmen's are, 
At random from the truth vainly express'd ; 

For I have sworn thee fair, and thought thee 
bright. 

Who art as black as hell, as dark as night. 

148 

O me, what eyes hath Love put in my head, 
Which have no correspondence with true sight! 
Or, if they have, where is my judgement fled, 
That censures falsely what they see aright ? 
If that be fair whereon my false eyes dote, 

What means the world to say it is not so ? 
If it be not, then love doth well denote 
Love's eye is not so true as all men's ; no, 
How can it? 0, how can Love's eye be true, 
That is so vex'd with watching and with tears? 
No marvel then, though I mistake my view ; 11 
The sun itself sees not till heaven clears. 

O cunning Love! with tears thou keep'st me 
blind, 

Lest eyes well-Seeing thy foul faults should find. 

149 

Canst thou, cruel ! say I love thee not. 
When I against myself with thee partake? 
Do I not think on thee, when I forgot 
Am of myself, all tyrant, for thy sake? 
Who hateth thee that I do call my friend? 5 

On whom frown'st thou that I do fawn upon? 
Nay, if thou lour'st on me, do I not spend 
Revenge upon myself with present moan ? 
What merit do I in myself respect. 
That is so proud thy service to despise, 10 

When all my best doth worship thy defect, 
Commanded by the motion of thine eyes? 

But, love, hate on, for now I know thy mind ; 

Those that can see thou lovest, and I am blind. 

ISO 

O, from what power hast thou this powerful might 
With insufficiency my heart to sway ? 
To make me give the lie to my true sight, 
And swear that brightness doth not grace the day ? 
Whence hast thou this becoming of things ill. 
That in the very refuse of thy deeds 6 

There is such strength and warrantise of skill. 
That, in my mind, thy worst all best exceeds? 



Who taught thee how to make me love thee more, 
The more I hear and see just cause of hate? 

0, though I love what others do abhor, H 
With others thou shouldst not abhor my state ; 

If thy unworthiness raised love in me. 
More worthy I to be beloved of thee. 

151 

Love is too young to know what conscience is ; 
Yet who knows not conscience is born of love? 
Then, gentle cheater, urge not my amiss, 
Lest guilty of my faults thy sweet self prove ; 
For, thou betraying me, I do betray 5 

My nobler part to my gross body's treason ; 
My soul doth tell my body that he may 
Triumph in love ; flesh stays no farther reason, 
But rising at thy name doth point out thee 
As his triumphant prize. Proud of this pride, 
He is contented thy poor drudge to be, 11 

To stand in thy affairs, fall by thy side. 
No want of conscience hold it that I call 
Her 'love' for whose dear love I rise and fall. 

152 

In loving thee thou know'st I am forsworn. 
But thou art twice forsworn, to me love swearing ; 
In act thy bed-vow broke, and new faith torn. 
In vowing new hate after new love bearing. 4 
But why of two oaths' breach do I accuse thee, 
When I break twenty ? I am perjured most ; 
For all my vows are oaths but to misuse thee, 
And all my honest faith in thee is lost; 
For I have sworn deep oaths of thy deep kindness. 
Oaths of thy love, thy truth, thy constancy ; 10 
And, to enlighten thee, gave eyes to blindness. 
Or made them swear against the thing they see; 
For I have sworn thee fair; more perjured I, 
To swear against the truth so foul a lie ! 

153 

Cupid laid by his brand and fell asleep ; 
A maid of Dian's this advantage found. 
And his love-kindling fire did quickly steejJ 
In a cold valley-fountain of that ground ; 
Which borrow'd from this holy fire of Love 5 
A dateless, lively heat, still to endure. 
And grew a seething bath, which yet men prove 
Against strange maladies a sovereign cure. 
But at my mistress' eye Love's brand new-tired. 
The boy for trial needs would touch my breast ; 

1, sick withal, the help of bath desired, 11 
And thither hied, a sad distemper'd guest. 

But found no cure; the bath for my help lies 
Where Cupid got new fire, my mistress' eyes. 

154 

The little Love-god lying once asleep 
Laid by his side his heart-inflaming brand. 
Whilst many nymphs that vow'd chaste life to 

keep 
Came tripping by ; but in her maiden hand 
The fairest votary took up that fire 5 

Which many legions of true hearts had warm'd; 
And so the general of hot desire 
Was sleeping by a virgin hand disarm'd. 
This brand she quenched in a cool well by. 
Which from Love's fire took heat perpetual, 10 
Growing a bath and healthful remedy 
For men diseased; but I, my mistress' thrall. 
Came there for cure, and this by that I prove, 
Love's fire heats water, water cools not love. 



A LOVER'S COMPLAINT 



From off a hill whose concave womb re-worded 

A plaintful story from a sistering vale, 

My spirits to attend this double voice accorded, 

And down I laid to list the sad-tuned tale ; 

Ere long espied a fickle maid full pale, 5 

Tearing of papei's, breaking rings a-twain, 

Storming her world with sorrow's wind and rain. 

Upon her head a platted hive of straw, 
Which fortified her visage from the sun, 
Wliiereon the thought might think sometime it saw 
The carcass of a beauty spent and done ; 11 

Time had not scythed all that youth begun, 
Nor youth all quit ; but, spite of heaven's fell rage, 
Some beauty peep'd through lattice of sear'd age. 

Oft did she heave her napkin to her eyne, 15 
Which on it bad conceited characters, 
Laundering the silken figures in the brine 
That season'd woe had pelleted in tears, 
And often reading what contents it bears; 
As often shrieking undistinguish'd woe, 20 

In clamours of all size, both high and low. 

Sometimes her levell'd eyes their carriage ride. 
As they did battery to the spheres intend ; 
Sometime diverted their poor balls are tied 24 
To the orbed earth ; sometimes they do extend 
Their view right on ; anon their gazes lend 
To every place at once, and nowhere fix'd 
The mind and sight distractedly commix'd. 

Her hair, nor loose nor tied in formal plat, 
Proclaim'd in her a careless hand of pride; 30 
For some, untuck'd, descended her sheaved hat. 
Hanging her pale and pined cheek beside ; 
Some in her threaden fillet still did bide, 
And, true to bondage, would not break from 
thence, S4 

Though slackly braided in loose negligence. 

A thousand favours from a maund she drew 
Of amber, crystal, and of beaded jet, 
Which one by one she in a river threw, 
Upon whose weeping margent she was set; 
Like usury, applying wet to wet, 40 

Or monarch's hands that lets not bounty fall 
Where want cries some, but where excess begs all. 

Of folded schedules had she many a one. 
Which she perused, sigh'd, tore, and gave the flood; 
Crack'd many a ring of posied gold and bone, 
Bidding them find their sepulchres in mud ; 46 
Found yet moe letters sadly penn'd in blood, 
With sleided silk feat and aflectedly 
Enswathed, and seal'd to curious secrecy. 



These often bathed she in her fluxive eyes, 50 
And often kiss'd, and often 'gan to tear; 
Cried, ' O false blood, thou register of lies. 
What unapproved witness dost thou bear! 
Ink would have seem'd more black and damned 

here!' 
This said, in top of rage the lines she rents, 55 
Big discontent so breaking their contents. 

A reverend man that grazed his cattle nigh, — 

Sometime a blusterer, that the ruffle knew 

Of court, of city, and had let go by 

The swiftest hours, observed as they flew, — 60 

Towards this afflicted fancy fastly drew; 

And, privileged by age, desires to know 

In brief the grounds and motives of her woe. 

So slides he down upon his grained bat, 

And comely-distant sits he by her side ; 65 

When he again desires her, being sat, 

Her grievance with his hearing to divide; 

If that from him there may be aught applied 

Which may her suflE'ering ecstasy assuage, 

'Tis promised in the charity of age. 70 

'Father,' she says, 'though in me you behold 
The injury of many a blasting hour. 
Let it not tell your judgement I am old ; 
Not age, but sorrow, over me hath power; 
I might as yet have been a spreading flower, 
Fresh to myself, if I had self-applied 76 

Love to myself, and to no love beside. 

' But, woe is me ! too early I attended 
A youthful suit, — it was to gain my grace, — 
Of one by nature's outwards so commended. 
That maidens' eyes stuck over all his face ; 81 
Love lack'd a dwelling and made him her place ; 
And when in his fair parts she did abide. 
She was new lodged and newly deified. 

' His browny locks did hang in crooked curls : 
And every light occasion of the wind 86 

Upon his lips their silken jiarcels hurls. 
What's sweet to do, to do will aptly find; 
Each eye that saw him did enchant the mind ; 
For on his visage was in little drawn 90 

What largeness thinks in Paradise was sawn. 

' Small show of man was yet upon his chin; 
His phoenix down began but to appear. 
Like unshorn velvet, on that termless skin, Qi 
Whose bare out-bragg'd the web it seem'd to wear; 
Yet showed his visage by that cost more dear; 
And nice affections wavering stood in doubt 
If best were as it was, or best without. 

415 



416 



A LOVER'S COMPLAINT 



[Line 99-217. 



' His qualities were beauteous as his form, 99 
For maiden-tongued iie was, and tliereof free; 
Yet, if men moved him, was he such a storm 
As oft 'twixt May and April is to see. 
When winds breathe sweet, unruly though they 

be. 
His rudeness so with his authorized youth 
Did livery falseness in a pride of truth. 105 

' Well could he ride, and often men would say, 
" That horse his mettle from his rider takes ; 
Proud of subjection, noble by the sway, 
What rounds, what bounds, what course, what 

stop he makes !" 
And controversy hence a question takes, 110 
Whether the horse by him became his deed, 
Or he his manage by the well-doing steed. 

'But quickly on this side the verdict went; 

His real habitude gave life and grace 

To appertainings and to ornament, 115 

Accomplish'd in himself, not in his case ; 

All aids, themselves made fairer by their place. 

Came for additions; yet their purposed trim 

Pieced not his grace, but were all graced by him. 

'So on the tip of his subduing tongue 120 

All kind of arguments and question deep, 
All replication prompt and reason strong. 
For his advantage still did wake and sleep ; 
To make the weeper laugh, the laugher weep. 
He had the dialect and different skill, 125 

Catching all passions in his craft of will; 

' That he did in the general bosom reign 
Of young, of old, and sexes both enchanted. 
To dwell with him in thoughts, or to remain 129 
In personal duty, following where he haunted; 
Consents bewitched, ere he desire, have granted. 
And dialogued for him what he would say, 
Ask'd their own wills and made their wills obey. 

' Many there were that did his picture get, 134 
To serve their eyes, and in it put their mind ; 
Like fools that in the imagination set 
The goodly objects which abroad they iind 
Of lands and mansions, theirs in thought assign'd ; 
And labouring in moe pleasures to bestow them 
Than the true gouty landlord which doth owe 
them ; 1-10 

^So many have, that never touch'd his hand. 
Sweetly supposed them mistress of his heart. 
My woeful self, that did in freedom stand. 
And was my own fee-simple, not in part, 144 
What with his art in youth, and youth in art. 
Threw my affections in his charmed power. 
Reserved the stalk and gave him all my flower. 

' Yet did I not, as some my equals did. 
Demand of him, nor being desired yielded; 
Finding myself in honour so forbid, 150 

With safest distance I mine honour shielded; 
Experience for me many bulwarks builded 
Of proofs new-bleeding, which remaiu'd the foil 
Of this false jewel, and his amorous spoU. 



' But, ah, who ever shunn'd by precedent 
The destined ill she must herself assay ? 
Or forced examples, 'gainst her own content, 



155 



To put the by-past perils in her way ? 
Counsel may stop awhile what will not stay; 
For when we rage, advice is often seen 160 

By blunting us to make our wits more keen. 

' Nor gives it satisfaction to our blood. 

That we must curb it upon others' proof; 

To be forbod the sweets that seem so good, 164 

For fear of harms that preach in our behoof. 

O appetite, from judgement stand aloof! 

The one a palate hath that needs will taste. 

Though Reason weep, and cry " It is thy last." 

' For further I could say " This man's ujitrue," 
And knew the patterns of his foul beguiling ; 170 
Heard where his plants in others' orchards grew. 
Saw how deceits were gilded in his smiling ; 
Knew vows were ever brokers to defiling; 
Thought characters and words merely but art. 
And bastards of his foul adulterate heart. 175 

'And long upon these terms I held my city. 
Till thus he 'gan besiege me : " Gentle maid. 
Have of my suflering youth some feeling pity. 
And be not of my holy vows afraid ; 
That's to ye sworn to none was ever said ; 180 
For feasts of love I have been call'd unto. 
Till now did ne'er invite, nor never woo. 

'"All my offences that abroad you see 
Are errors of the blood, none of the mind ; 
Love made them not ; with acture they may be, 
Where neither party is nor true nor kind ; 186 
They sought their shame that so their shame did 

find; 
And so much less of shame in me remains 
By how much of me their reproach contains. 

' "Among the many that mine eyes have seen. 
Not one whose flame my heart so much as warmed. 
Or my aifection put to the smallest teen, 192 

Or any of my leisures ever charmed ; 
Harm have I done to them, but ne'er was harmed ; 
Kept hearts in liveries, but mine own was free. 
And reign'd, commanding in his monarchy. 196 

' "Look here, what tributes wounded fancies sent 

me, 
Of paled pearls and rubies red as blood ; 
Figuring that they their passions likewise lent me 
Of grief and blushes, aptly understood 200 

In bloodless white and the encrimson'd mood; 
Effects of terror and dear modesty, 
Encamjyd in hearts, but fighting outwardly. 

' "And, lo, behold these talents of their hair, 
With twisted metal amorously impleach'd, 205 
I have received from many a several fair, 
Their kind acceptance weepingly beseech'd, 
With the annexions of fair gems enrich'd. 
And deep-brain'd sonnets that did amplify 209 
Each stone's dear nature, worth, and quality. 

' " The diamond, why, 'twas beautiful and hard, 
Whereto his invised properties did tend ; 
The deep-green emerald, in whose fresh regard 
Weak sights their sickly radiance do amend ; 
The heaven-hued sapphire and the opal blend 
With objects manifold; each several stone, 216 
With wit well blazon'd, smiled or made some moan. 



Line 21S-329.] 



A LOVER'S COMPLAINT 



All 



' " Lo, all these trophies of affections hot, 
Of pensived and subdued desires the tender, 
Nature hath charged me that I hoard them not, 
But yield them up -n'here I myself must render. 
That is, to you, my origin and ender; 222 

For these, of force, must your oblations be, 
Since I their altar, j-ou enpatron me. 

' " 0, then, advance of yours that phraseless hand, 
Whose white weighs down the airy scale of praise ; 
Take all these similes to your own command, 227 
Hallow'd with sighs that burning lungs did raise ; 
What me your minister, for you obeys. 
Works under you ; and to your audit comes 
Their distract parcels in combined sums. 231 

' " Lo, this device was sent me from a nun, 

Or sister sanctified, of holiest note; 

Which late her noble suit in court did shun, 

Whose rarest havings made tlie blossoms dote ; 

For she was sought by spirits of richest coat. 

But kept cold distance, and did thence remove. 

To spend her living in eternal love. 238 

' " But, my sweet, what labour is 't to leave 
The thing we have not, mastering what not strives. 
Playing the place which did no form receive, 241 
Playing patient sports in unconstrained gyves? 
She that her fame so to herself contrives, 
The scars of battle 'scapeth by the flight, 244 

And makes her absence valiant, not her might. 

'"O, pardon me, in that my boast is true; 
The accident which brought me to her eye 
Upon the moment did her force subdue. 
And now she would the caged cloister fly; 
Religious love put out Religion's eye; 250 

Not to be tempted, would she be immured. 
And now, to tempt all, liberty procured. 

' " How mighty then you are, 0, hear me tell ! 

The broken bosoms that to me belong 

Have emptied all their fountains in my well. 

And mine I pour your ocean all among; 256 

I strong o'er them, and you o'er me being strong. 

Must for j'our victory us all congest. 

As compound love to physic your cold breast. 

'"My parts had power to charm a sacred nun. 
Who disciplined, ay, dieted in grace, 261 

Believed her eyes when thej' to assail begun, 
All vows and consecrations giving place ; 
O most potential love ! vow, bond, nor space, 
In thee hath neither sting, knot, nor confine, 265 
For thou art all, and all things else are thine. 

' " When thou impressest, what are precepts worth 
Of stale example? When thou wilt inflame, 
How coldly those impediments stand forth 
Of wealth, of filial fear, law, kindred, fame ! 
Love's arms are peace, 'gainst rule, 'gainst sense, 
'gainst shame ; 271 

And sweetens, in the suffering pangs it bears. 
The aloes of all forces, shocks and fears. 

27 



'" Now all these hearts that do on mine depend. 
Feeling it break, with leading groans they pine; 
And supplicant their sighs to you extend, 276 
To leave the battery that you make 'gainst mine. 
Lending soft audience to my sweet design, 
And credent soul to that strong-bonded oath 
That shall prefer and undertake my troth." 280 

'This said, his watery eyes he did dismount. 
Whose sights till then were levell'd on mf face ; 
Each cheek a river running from a fount 283 
With brinish current downward flow'd apace; 
0, how the channel to the stream gave grace ! 
Who glazed with crystal gate the glowing roses 
That flamd through water which their hue en- 
closes. 

' father, what a hell of witchcraft lies 

In the small orb of one particular tear ! 

But with the inundation of the eyes 290 

What rocky heart to water will not wear? 

What breast so cold that is not warmed here? 

cleft effect ! cold modesty, hot wrath, 

Both fire from hence and chill extincture hath. 

' For, lo, his passion, but an art of craft, 295 

Even there resolved my reason into tears ; 
There my white stole of chastity I daft' 'd, 
Shook otf my sober guards and civil fears ; 
Ajjpear to him, as he to me appears, 299 

All melting ; though our drops this difference bore. 
His poison'd me, and mine did him restore. 

' In him a plenitude of subtle matter, 
Applied to cautels, all strange forms receives. 
Of burning blushes, or of weeping water, 304 
Or swounding paleness ; and he takes and leaves. 
In either's aptness, as it best deceives. 
To blush at speeches rank, to weep at woes, 
Or to turn white and swound at tragic shows ; 

' That not a heart which in his level came 
Could 'scape the hail of his all-hurting aim, 310 
Showing fair nature is both kind and tame ; 
And, veil'd in them, did win whom he would maim ; 
Against the thing he sought he w&»ald exclaim ; 
When he most burn'd in heart-wish'd luxury. 
He preach'd pure maid and praised cold chastity. 

'Thus merely with the garment of a Grace 316 
The naked and concealed fiend he cover'd ; 
That the unexperient gave the tempter place, 
Which, like a cherubin, above them hover'd. 
Who, young and simple, would not be so lover'd? 
Ay me ! I fell, and yet do question make 321 

What I should do again for such a sake. 

' O; that infected moisture of his eye, 
0, that false fire which in his cheek so glow'd, 
0, that forced thunder from his heart did fly, 325 
O, that sad breath his spongy lungs bestow'd, 
O, all that borrow'd motion seeming owed, 
Would yet again betray the fore-betray'd, 
And new pervert a reconciled maid !' 



THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM 



When my love swears that she is made of truth, 
I do believe her, though I know she lies, 
That she might think me some uututor'd youth, 
Unskilful in the world's false forgeries, 4 

Thus vainly thinking that she thinks me young. 
Although I know my years be past the best, 
I smiling credit her false-speaking tongue. 
Outfacing faults in love with love's ill rest. 
But wherefore says my love that she is young? 
And wherefore say not I that I am old ? 10 

O, love's best habit is a soothing tongue. 
And age, in love, loves not to have years told, 
Therefore I'll lie with love, and love with me. 
Since that our faults in love thus smother'd be. 



Two loves I have, of comfort and despair. 
That like two spirits do suggest me still; 
My better angel is a man right fair. 
My worser spirit a woman colour'd ill. 
To win me soon to hell, my female evil 5 

Tempteth my better angel from my side, 
And would corrupt my saint to be a devil, 
Wooing his purity with her fair pride. 
And whether that my angel be turn'd fiend. 
Suspect I may, yet not directly tell ; 10 

For being both to me, both to each friend, 
I guess one angel in another's hell ; 
The truth I shall not know, but live in doubt. 
Till my bad angel fire my good one out. 



Did not the heavenly rhetoric of thine eye, 
'Gainst whom the world could not hold argument. 
Persuade my heart to this false perjury? 
Vows for thee broke deserve not punishment. 
A woman I forswore; but I will prove, 5 

Thou being a goddess, I forswore not thee ; 
My vow was earthly, thou a heavenly love; 
Thy grace being gain'd cures all disgrace in me. 
My vow was breath, and breath a vapour is ; 
Then, thou fair sun, that on this earth doth shine. 
Exhale this vapour vow ; in thee it is; 11 

If broken, then it is no fault of mine. 
If by me broke, what fool is not so wise 
To break an oath, to win a paradise ? 



Sweet Cytherea, sitting by a brook 
With young Adonis, lovely, fresh, and green. 
Did court the lad with many a lovely look, 
Such looks as none could look but beauty's queen. 

418 



She told him stories to delight his ear, 5 

She show'd him favours to allure his eye ; 

To win his heart, she touch'd him here and there; 

Touches so soft still conquer chastity. 

But whether unripe years did want conceit. 

Or he refused to take her figured proffer, 10 

The tender nibbler would not touch the bait, 

But siuile and jest at every gentle offer; 

Then fell she on her back, fair queen, and 
toward ; 

He rose and ran away ; ah, fool too froward. 



If love make me forsworn, how shall I swear to 
love? 

never faith could hold, if not to beauty vowed ; 

Though to myself forsworn, to thee I'll constant 
prove ; 

Those thoughts, to me like oaks, to thee like osiers 
bowed. 

Study his bias leaves, and makes his book thine 
eyes, 5 

Where all those pleasures live that art can com- 
prehend. 

If knowledge be the mark, to know thee shall 
sufiice; 

Well learned is that tongue that well can thee 
commend ; 

All ignorant that soul that sees thee without 
wonder ; 

Which is to me some praise, that I thy parts ad- 
mire ; 10 

Thine eye Jove's lightning seems, thy voice his 
dreadful thunder. 

Which, not to anger bent, is music and sweet fire. 
Celestial as thou art, do not love that wrong, 
To sing heaven's praise with such an earthly 
tongue. 

e 

Scarce had the sun dried up the dewy morn, 
And scarce the herd gone to the hedge for shade, 
When Cytherea, all in love forlorn, 
A longing tarriance for Adonis made 
Under an osier growing by a brook, 5 

A brook where Aden used to cool his spleen ; 
Hot was the day ; she hotter that did look 
For his approach, that often there had been. 
Anon he comes, and throws his mantle by, 9 

And stood stark naked on the brook's green brim ; 
The sun look'd on the world with glorious eye, 
Yet not so wistly as this queen on him. 

He, spying her, bounced in, whereas he stood; 

' Jove,' quoth she, ' why was not I a flood !' 



THE PASSIONATE PILGRIAI 



419 



Fair is my love, but not so fair as fickle, 
Mild as a dove, but neither true nor trusty. 
Brighter than glass and yet, as glass is, brittle, 
Softer than wax and yet as iron rusty ; 
A lily pale, with damask dye to grace her, 5 

' None fairer, nor none falser to deface her. 

* 

Her lips to mine how often hath she joined. 
Between each kiss her oaths of true love swearing ! 
How many tales to jjlease me hath she coined, 
Dreading my love, the loss thereof still fearing! 
Yet in the midst of all her pure protestings. 
Her faith, her oaths, her tears, and all were 
jestings. 12 

She burn'd with love, as straw with fire flameth; 
She burn'd out love, as soon as straw out-burneth ; 
She framed the love, and yet she foil'd the framing ; 
She bade love last, and yet she fell a-turning. 1(3 

Was this a lover, or a lecher whether? 

Bad in the best, though excellent in neither. 



If music and sweet poetry agree. 
As they must needs, the sister and the brother. 
Then must the love be great 'twixt thee and me. 
Because thou lovest the one and I the other. 
Dowland to thee is dear, whose heavenly touch 
Upon the lute doth ravish human sense ; 6 

Spenser to me, whose deep conceit is such 
As passing all conceit needs no defence. 
Thou lovest to hear the sweet melodious sound 
That Phoebus' lute, the queen of music, makes; 
And I in deep delight am chiefly drown'd 11 

When as himself to singing he betakes. 

One god is god of both, as poets feign ; 

One knight loves both, and both in thee remain. 

Fair was the morn when the fair queen of love, 
***** 

Paler for sorrow than her milk-white dove, 
For Adon's sake, a youngster proud and wild; 
Her stand she takes upon a steep up-hill ; 5 

Anon Adonis comes with horn and hounds; 
She, silly queen, with more than love's good will. 
Forbade the boy he should not pass those grounds ; 
' Once,' quoth she, ' did I see a fair sweet youth 
Here in these brakes deep-wounded with a boar, 
Deep in the thigh, a spectacle of ruth ! 11 

See, in my thigh,' quoth she, 'here was the sore.' 
She showed hers ; he saw more wounds than one. 
And blushing fled, and left her all alone. 

lO 

Sweet rose, fair flower, untimely pluck'd, soon 

vaded, 
Pluck'd in the bud and vaded in the spring ! 
Bright orient pearl, alack, too timely shaded! 
Fair creature, kill'd too soon by death's sharp 
sting ! 
Like a green plum that hangs upon a tree, 5 
And falls through wind before the fall should be. 

I weep for thee and yet no cause I have ; 
For why thou left'st me nothing in thy will ; 
And yet thou left'st me more than I did crave ; 
For why I craved nothing of thee still ; 10 



O yes, dear friend, I pardon crave of thee, 
Thy discontent thou didst bequeath to me. 

11 

Venus, with young Adonis sitting by her 
Under a myrtle shade, began to woo him ; 
She told the youngling how god Mars did try her, 
And as he fell to her, so fell she to him. 
'Even thus,' quoth she, 'the warlike god em- 
braced me,' 5 
And then she clipp'd Adonis in her arms; 
' Even thus,' quoth she, 'the warlike god unlaced 

me,' 
As if the boy should use like loving charms ; 
'Even thus,' quoth she, 'he seized on ray lips,' 
And with her lips on his did act the seizure ; 10 
And as she fetched breath, away he skips, 
And would not take her meaning nor her pleasure. 
Ah, that I had my lady at this bay. 
To kiss and clip me till I run away ! 

18 

Crabbed age and youth cannot live together; 
Youth is full of pleasance, age is full of care; 
Youth like summer morn, age like winter wea- 
ther; 
Youth like summer brave, age like winter bare. 
Youth is full of sport, age's breath is short; 6 

Youth is nimble, age is lame ; 
Youth is hot and bold, age is weak and cold ; 

Youth is wild, and age is tame. 
Age, I do abhor thee ; youth, I do adore thee ; 

0, my love, my love is young ! 10 

Age, I do defy thee ; O, sweet shepherd, hie thee, 

For methiuks thou stay'st too long. 



13 

Beauty is but a vain and doubtful good ; 

A shining gloss that vadeth suddenly ; 

A flower that dies when first it 'gins to bud ; 

A brittle glass that's broken presently ; 
A doubtful good, a gloss, a glass, a flower, o 
Lost, vaded, broken, dead within an hour. 

And as goods lost are selcl or never found. 
As vaded gloss no rubbing will refresh. 
As flowers dead lie wither'd on the ground. 
As broken glass no cement can redress, 10 

So beauty blemish'd once's for ever lost. 
In spite of physic, painting, pain, and cost. 

14 

Good-night, good rest. Ah, neither be my share ; 
She bade good night that kept my rest away; 
And daff'd me to a cabin hang'd with care. 
To descant on the doubts of my decay. 

'Farewell,' quoth she, 'and come again to-mor- 
row;' 

Fare well I could not, for I supp'd with sorrow. 

Yet at my parting sweetly did she smile. 
In scorn or friendship, nill I construe whether; 
'T may be, she joy'd to jest at raj' exile, 9 

'T maj' be, again to make me wander thither; 
'Wander,' a word for shadows like myself, 
As take the pain, but cannot pluck the pelf. 



420 



THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM 



15 

Lord, how mine eyes throw gazes to the east ! 

My heart doth charge the watch; the morning 
rise 

Doth cite each moving sense from idle rest. 

Not daring trust the ofiEice of mine eyes, 4 

AVhile Philomela sits and sings, I ait and mark, 
And wish her lays were tuned like the lark ; 

For she doth welcome daylight with her ditty, 
And drives away dark dreaming night ; 
The night so pack'd, I post unto my pretty ; 9 
Heart hath his hope and eyes their wished sight; 
Sorrow changed to solace, and solace mix'd 

with sorrow ; 
For why, she sigh'd, and hade me come to- 
morrow. 

Were I with her, the night would post too soon ; 
But now are minutes added to the hours ; 14 

To spite me now, each minute seems a moon ; 
Yet not for me, shine sun to succour flowers ! 
Pack night, peep day ; good day, of night now 

borrow ; 
Sliort, night, to-night, and length thyself to- 
morrow. 

16 
It was a lording's daughter, the fairest one of 

three. 
That liked of her master as well as well might be, 
Till looking on an Englishman, the fair'st that 

eye could see, 
Her fancy fell a-turning. 
Long was the combat doubtful that love with love 

did fight ; 5 

To leave the master loveless, or kill the gallant 

knight ; 
To put in practice either, alas, it was a spite 

Unto the silly damsel ! 
But one must be refused; more mickle was the 

pain 
That nothing could be used to turn them both to 

gain, 10 

For of the two the trusty knight was wounded 

with disdain ; 
Alas, she could not help it ! 
Thus art with arms contending was victor of the 

day, 
^yhich by a gift of learning did bear the maid 

away ; 
Then, lullaby, the learned man hath got the lady 

gay ; 15 

For now my song is ended. 

ir 

On a day, alack the day ! 

Love, whose month was ever May, 

Spied a blossom passing fair, 

Playing in the wanton air; 

Through the velvet leaves the wind 5 

All unseen 'gan passage find ; 

That the lover, sick to death, 

Wish'd himself the heaven's breath. 

'Air,' quoth he, 'thy cheeks may blow; 

Air, would I might triumph so ! 10 

But, alas ! my hand bath sworn 

Ne'er to pluck thee from thy thorn ; 

Vow, alack ! for youth unmeet ; 

Youth, so apt to pluck a sweet. 



Thou for whom Jove would swear 15 

Juno but an Ethiope were ; 
And deny himself for Jove, 
Turning mortal for thy love.' 

18 

My flocks feed not. 
My ewes breed not, 
My rams speed not ; 

All is amiss ; 
Love's denying, 6 

Faith's defying. 
Heart's reuying • 

Causer of this. 
All my merry jigs are quite forgot. 
All my lady's love is lost, God wot ; 10 

Where her faith was firmly flx'd in love, 
There a nay is placed without remove. 
One silly cross 
Wrought all my loss ; 

O frowning Fortune, cursed, fickle dame ! 15 
For now I see 
Inconstancy 

More in women than in men remain. 

In black mourn I, 

All fears scorn I, 20 

Love hath forlorn me, 

Living in thrall ; 
Heart is bleeding. 
All help needing, 
cruel speeding, 25 

Fraughted with gall. 
My shepherd's pipe can sound no deal ; 
My wether's bell rings doleful knell; 
My curtal dog, that wont to have play'd. 
Plays not at all, but seems afraid ; 30 

My sighs so deep 
Procure to weep. 

In howling wise, to see my doleful plight. 
How sighs resound 
Through heartless ground, 35 

Like a thousand vauquish'd men in blood y fight ! 

Clear wells spring not, 
Sweet birds sing not. 
Green plants bring not 

Forth their dye ; 40 

Herds stand weeping, 
Flocks all sleeping, 
Nymphs back peeping 

Fearfully ; 
All our pleasure known to us poor swains, 45 
All our ^nerry meetings on the plains, 
All our evening sport from us is fled, 
All our love is lost, for Love is dead. 
Farewell, sweet lass, 
Thy like ne'er was 50 

For a sweet content, the cause of all my moan ; 
Poor Corydon 
Must live alone ; 

Other help for him I see that there is none. 

19 

When as thine eye hath chose the dame. 
And stall'd the deer that thou shouldst strike, 
Let reason rule things worthy blame, 
As well as fancy, partial wight ; 
Take counsel of some wiser head, 5 

Neither too young nor yet unwed. 



THE PASSIONATE PILGRIM 



421 



And when thou coraest thy tale to tell, 
Bmooth not thy tongue with filed talk, 
Lest she some subtle practice smell, — 
A cripple soon can find a halt ; — 
But plainly say thou lovest her well, 
And set thy person forth to sell. 

What though her frowning brows be bent, 
Her cloudy looks will calm ere uight ; 
And then too late she will repent 
That thus dissembled her delight ; 
And twice desire, ere it be day. 
That which with scorn she put away. 

What though she strive to try her strength, 
And ban and brawl and say thee nay, 
Her feeble force will yield at length. 
When craft hath taught her thus to say : 
' Had women been so strong as men. 
In faith, you had not had it then.' 

And to her will frame all thy ways ; 

Spare not to spend, and chiefly there 

Where thy desert may merit praise. 

By ringing in thy lady's ear ; 
The strongest castle, tower and town. 
The golden bullet beats it down. 

Serve always with assured trust. 

And in thy suit be humble true ; 

Unless thy lady i^rove unjust. 

Press never thou to choose anew ; 
When time shall serve, be thou not slack 
To proffer, though she put thee back. 

The wiles and guiles that women work, 
Dissembled with an outward show. 
The tricks and toys that in them lurk, 
The cock that treads them shall not know. 
Have you not heard it said full oft, 
A woman's nay doth stand for nought? 

Think women still to strive with men. 

To sin and never for to saint ; 

There is no heaven, by holy then. 

When time with age shall them attaint. 
Were kisses all the joys in bed. 
One woman would another wed. 

But, soft ! enough, — too much, I fear, — 

Lest that my mistress hear my song ; 

She will not stick to round me on th' ear, . 

To teach my tongue to be so long ; 
Yet will she blush, here be it said, 
To hear her secrets so bewray'd. 

20 

Live with me, and be my love. 
And we will all the pleasures prove 
That hills and valleys, dales and fields, 
And all the craggy mountains yields. 

There will we sit upon the rocks, 
And see the shepherds feed their flocks, 
By shallow rivers, by whose falls 
Melodious birds sing madrigals. 



25 



50 



There will I make thee a bed of roses. 
With a thousand fragrant posies, 
A cap of flowers and a kirtle 
Embroider'd all with leaves of myrtle. 

A belt of straw and ivy buds. 
With coral clasps and amber studs; 
And if these pleasures may thee move, 
Then live with me and be my love. 

Love's Ansvfer. 
If that the world and love were young, 
And truth in every shepherd's tongue. 
These pretty pleasures might me move 
To live with thee and be thy love. 

SI 

As it fell upon a day 

In the merry month of May, 

Sitting in a pleasant shade 

Which a grove of myrtles made, 

Beasts did leap and birds did sing, 

Trees did grow and plants did spring; 

Every thing did banish moan, 

Save the nightingale alone; 

She, poor bird, as all forlorn, 

Lean'd her breast up-till a thorn. 

And there sung the dolefull'st ditty, 

That to hear it was great pity ; 

' Fie, fie, fie,' now would she cry ; 

' Tereu, tereu !' by and by ; 

That to hear her so complain. 

Scarce 1 could from tears refrain ; 

For her griefs so lively shown 

Made me think upon mine own. 

Ah, thought I, thou mourn'st in vain! 

None takes pity on thy pain ; 

Senseless trees they cannot hear thee ; 

Buthless beasts they will not cheer thee ; 

King Pandion he is dead ; 

All thy friends are lapp'd in lead ; 

All thy fellow birds do sing, 

Careless of thy sorrowing. 

Even so, poor bird, like thee, 

None alive will pity me. 

Whilst as fickle Fortune smiled. 

Thou and I were both beguiled. 

Every one that flatters thee 
Is no friend in misery. 
Words are easy, like the wind ; 
Faithful friends are hard to find; 
Every man will be thy friend 
Whilst thou hast wherewith to spend; 
But if store of crowns be scant. 
No man will supply thy want. 
If that one be prodigal. 
Bountiful they will him call. 
And with such-like flattering, 
' Pity but he were a king;' 
If he be addict to vice. 
Quickly him they will entice; 
If to women he be bent. 
They have at commandment; 
But if Fortune once do frown. 
Then farewell his great renown ; 
They that fawn'd on him before 
Use his company no more. 



20 



25 



30 



40 



422 



THE PHCENIX AND TURTLE 



He that is thy friend indeed, 
He will help thee in thy need ; 
If thou sorrow, he will weep ; 
If thou wake, he cannot sleep ; 



Thus of every grief in heart 
He with thee doth bear a part. 
These are certain signs to know 
Faithful friend from flattering foe. 



THE PHCENIX AND TURTLE 



Let the bird of loudest lay. 

On the sole Arabian tree, 

Herald sad and trumpet be. 

To whose sound chaste wings obey. 

But thou shrieking harbinger, 5 

Foul precurrer of the fiend. 

Augur of the fever's end. 

To this troop come thou not near ! 

From this session interdict 

Every fowl of tyrant wing, 10 

Save the eagle, feather'd king ; 

Keep the obsequy so strict. 

Let the priest in surplice white. 

That defunctive music can. 

Be the death-divining swan, 15 

Lest the requiem lack his right. 

And thou treble-dated crow. 

That thy sable gender makest 

With the breath thou givest and takest, 

'Mongst our mourners shalt thou go. 20 

Here the anthem doth commence: 
Love and constancy is dead ; 
Phcenix and the turtle fled 
In a mutual flame from hence. 



So they loved, as love in twain 
Had the essence but in one ; 
Two distincts, division none; 
Number there in love was slain. 

Hearts remote, yet not asunder ; 
Distance, and no space was seen 
'Twixt the turtle and his queen ; 
But in them it were a wonder. 

So between them love did shine. 
That the turtle saw his right 



25 



Flaming in the phcenix' sight ; 35 

Either was the other's mine. 

Property was thus appalled. 

That the self was not the same ; 

Single nature's double name 

Neither two nor one was called. 40 

Reason, in itself confounded. 
Saw division grow together. 
To themselves yet either neither, 
Simple were so well compounded ; 

That it cried. How true a twain 45 

Seemeth this concordant one ! 
Love hath reason, reason none. 
If what parts can so remain. 

Whereupon it made this threne 

To the phoenix and the dove, 50 

C'o-supremes and stars of love, 

As chorus to their tragic scene. 

TH RENOS. 
Beauty, truth, and rarity, 
Grace in all simplicity, 
Here enclosed in cinders lie. 55 

Death is now the phoenix' nest ; 
And the turtle's loyal breast 
To eternity doth rest, 

Leaving no posterity ; 

'Twas not their infirmity, 60 

It was married chastity. 

Truth may seem, but cannot be 
Beauty brag, but 'tis not she ; 
Truth and beauty buried be. 

To this urn let those repair 65 

That are either true or fair ; 

For these dead birds sigh a prayer. 



